back to list

Quackcast 682 - Exposition!

Ozoneocean at 12:00AM, April 9, 2024
likes!

LISTEN on our player!
Or TuneinRadio - https://tunein.com/podcasts/Books–Literature/Drunkduck-Quackcast-p1150194/

Tantz came up with this week's topic: Exposition! It's because she's well on her way into starting her latest comic, Verdant, and working out ways to introduce the story, the world, characters, culture, magic systems, religion etc without doing a massive text dump, which people generally don't like too much. So how do you exposit in a good way?

One popular way is through a dialogue; characters give overly verbose and entirely unnecessary explanations about how things work during ordinary conversations, telling people things that they would already know from childhood, just so the reader can be informed in a “natural” way, which isn't natural and it actually really terrible, eg: “Hello my friend David Prowse who I have known since high school but have had a big falling out with since you slept with my wife. Could you hand me the energy cell please? Of course you know that all machines now are powered by energy cells which are miniaturised nuclear fusion reactors, so that we have unlimited, cheap power always.”

Another way is to have a character in a classroom, being taught particular concepts like history or politics so they and the reader “learn” together. This can be terrible but it can also be pretty good if you handle it right. Even text dumps can work ok if they're done correctly, but that's rare.

The best way to do exposition is to introduce the audience to only the concepts they need to know for now, in a basic way, with plenty of context in ways that are fully and easily relatable. Like showing a small, slow stakes scene that introduces key concepts and shows the character's reaction to them. If most of the stuff is easily relatable then the audience will focus more on the few isolated weird new things you introduce and they can learn about them from seeing how the characters react to them and how they fit into the context of the world, that way you don't need to explain them. A great example of this is the new comic by Marcorossi, Bunyan Mk7, it's a perfect example of quick, minimal exposition through story.

From here we started talking about how in anime often an entire first season of 13 episodes is devoted to this sort of expository introduction, which I find extremely pleasant because the focus of that kind of storytelling is not “conflict” but instead “progress”, which is something not well understood in modern storytelling anymore. The interest the audience gets from the story isn't that a character wants something or needs to fight to get it or resolve an issue, instead it's the linear consumption of knowledge that builds to the goal of finding out more about something. You specifically don't care about resolving anything, rather the learning is fun for its own sake. “Progress” can also be anything that builds towards a goal. I find people still like to rationalise this as “conflict” but you need to stretch the definition too much that it makes the concept useless and no longer logically understandable.

How do you do exposition? With a text dump? Via dialogue? A classroom? An introductory prologue? Or do you just throw the audience in the deep end and expect them to sink or swim? That said, the more familiar and relatable the story offering is, the less work on the exposition you have to do.

This week Gunwallace has given us a theme inspired by Cafe Strange - A melancholic jazz revere on times past and times yet to come. Off-time percussion, a gently plucked double bass, evocative piano and an electric violin play a tune of loneliness and possibility.

Topics and shownotes

Links

Exposition examples in comics:
Verdant, by Tantz_Aerine - https://www.theduckwebcomics.com/Verdant/
Bunyan Mk7, by marcorossi - https://www.theduckwebcomics.com/Bunyan_Mk7


Featured comic:
Prisoner of Paint - https://www.theduckwebcomics.com/news/2024/apr/02/featured-comic-prisoner-of-paint/

Featured music:
Cafe Strange - https://www.theduckwebcomics.com/Cafe_Strange/ - by Synwells, rated T.

Special thanks to:
Gunwallace - http://www.virtuallycomics.com
Ozoneocean - https://www.theduckwebcomics.com/user/ozoneocean
Kawaiidaigakusei - https://www.theduckwebcomics.com/user/kawaiidaigakusei
Tantz Aerine - https://www.theduckwebcomics.com/user/Tantz_Aerine/
Banes - https://www.theduckwebcomics.com/user/Banes/


VIDEO exclusive!
Become a subscriber on the $5 level and up to see our weekly Patreon video and get our advertising perks!
- https://www.patreon.com/DrunkDuck
Even at $1 you get your name with a link on the front page and a mention in the weekend newsposts!

Join us on Discord - https://discordapp.com/invite/7NpJ8GS

comment

anonymous?

Ozoneocean at 2:58AM, April 13, 2024

@EssayBee - hahaha! That's the iconic one. It's good for 3 reasons: 1. It wasn't real exposition, it was just a stylised homage to the old scfi movie serials 2. It don't really set things up in a meaningful way like traditional exposition or explain anything, it just drops you right into the middle of an ongoing story 3. You absolutely don't need it, without it everything still makes complete sense.

EssayBee at 11:40AM, April 12, 2024

Perhaps the greatest text exposition of all time: A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away. . . . It is a period of civil war. Rebel spaceships . . .

Ozoneocean at 9:03PM, April 9, 2024

@JohnCelestri - Yeah, there are a lot of ways to do it and it's all ok as long as we retain audience interest :)

Ozoneocean at 9:02PM, April 9, 2024

@paneltastic - Exactly! Tease them to please them haha!

Ozoneocean at 8:58PM, April 9, 2024

@PaulEberhardt - haha everyone should hire that old nun!

Ozoneocean at 8:57PM, April 9, 2024

@Marcorossi- My pleaure

JohnCelestri at 5:12AM, April 9, 2024

I usually handle exposition through a character's learning about a situation via dialog with another character. It could be a misunderstanding, an argument, or just plain "I'm new here and I don't understand what's happening to me." I've only done one massive info dump, but it was as a standalone "Legend/Bible" page at the beginning of my Fire Fist Angel series, setting the rules of the "Altered Universe".

paneltastic at 4:18AM, April 9, 2024

I'll explain something if I absolutely have to but I prefer to drop bits here and there that I can slowly fill in. Too many readers want everything explained immediately but what's the point if you just get told everything on page one?

PaulEberhardt at 3:37AM, April 9, 2024

I've been prone to text dumps, which afterwards made me go "Oh sh... I did it again." I learned from it since that it's all about fighting the impulse of wanting to get the exposition over with quickly to get to the good bits. It's a bad habit not easy to kick, especially if you use storybook formats and have lots of ideas you want to put in, but it can be done. I found that giving myself less space for the text won't work, but imagining a crabby old nun with a rattan cane constantly watching me and snarling "restraint!" kind of does.

marcorossi at 2:38AM, April 9, 2024

Thanks for the compliments for Bunyan!


Forgot Password
©2011 WOWIO, Inc. All Rights Reserved Mastodon