Writing Asian Romance Characters
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About this ebook
An all-new writing skills reference book from the author of Romance In a Month:
Have you wanted to enrich your romance novels by including a diverse cast of characters?
Do you want your stories to reflect the society around you?
Are you unsure how to portray Asian characters in a balanced way that does not perpetuate stereotypes?
If so, I can be your mentor and help you develop Asian romantic heroes and heroines that are strong, desirable, talented, and flawed—in other words, well-rounded characters, who, like all romantic heroes and heroines deserve and find a happy ending.
I have experience in this area, having grown up Asian American and have written many romance novels with Asian heroes and heroines. I've also read widely in both literature and fiction areas, as well as taken ethnic studies classes and researched Asian American history. I can be your guide in finding resources to deepen your knowledge while pointing out areas to pay attention.
I will also encourage you to let your characters fly, no matter what their background and to not let fear hold you back when developing your Asian characters.
In this book, I will go over common myths and stereotypes, respectful ways of describing Asian characters, and the tropes to avoid. I'll briefly touch on the history of the various Asian groups in America and point out to you the difference in experience based on when the Asian ancestor immigrated.
Interracial and multicultural romance is a thriving romance market, and I will talk about some of the concerns and opportunities when writing characters who come from different backgrounds. I'll include example excerpts to illustrate my points and interview questions you can use to develop your unique characters from an Asian perspective.
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Other Writing Books by Rachelle Ayala
- Dangerous Love: Writing Romantic Suspense
- Love Stories: Writing a Romance Novella
- 366 Ways to Know Your Character
- Romance in a Month
Rachelle Ayala
Rachelle Ayala is an award-winning USA Today bestselling author of contemporary romance and romantic suspense. She writes emotionally challenging stories but believes in the power of love and hope. Her book, Knowing Vera, won the 2015 Angie Ovation Award, and A Father for Christmas garnered a 2015 Readers' Favorite Gold Award. Christmas Stray was awarded the 2016 Readers' Favorite Gold Award and A Pet for Christmas had an Honorable Mention. In 2017, Playing for the Save received the Readers' Favorite Gold Award for Realistic Fiction. Sign up for her NEWSLETTER to get a FREE surprise book and her latest book news! http://smarturl.it/RachAyala Visit her Reader's Guide at http://rachelleayala.net/books/ or contact her at http://smarturl.it/ContactRachelle Join her STREET TEAM https://www.facebook.com/groups/ClubRachelleAyala/
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Writing Asian Romance Characters - Rachelle Ayala
Preface
Have you wanted to enrich your romance novels by including a diverse cast of characters?
Do you want your stories to reflect the society around you?
Are you unsure how to portray Asian characters in a balanced way that does not perpetuate stereotypes?
If so, I can be your mentor and help you develop Asian romantic heroes and heroines that are strong, desirable, talented, and flawed—in other words, well-rounded characters, who, like all romantic heroes and heroines deserve and find a happy ending.
I have experience in this area, having grown up Asian American and have written many romance novels with Asian heroes and heroines. I’ve also read widely in both literature and fiction areas, as well as taken ethnic studies classes and researched Asian American history. For more detail, please go to the Who Am I?
chapter near the end.
While I’m not able to represent billions of people, I can be your guide in finding resources to deepen your knowledge while pointing out areas to pay attention.
I will also encourage you to let your characters fly, no matter what their background and to not let fear hold you back when developing your Asian characters.
In this book, I will go over common myths and stereotypes, respectful ways of describing Asian characters, and the tropes to avoid. I’ll briefly touch on the history of the various Asian groups in America and point out to you the difference in experience based on when the Asian ancestor immigrated.
Interracial and multicultural romance is a thriving romance market, and I will talk about some of the concerns and opportunities when writing characters who come from different backgrounds.
I will also point out the difference in writing historical Asian fiction versus contemporary romance and romantic suspense with Asian characters. In addition, the Asian American experience will be completely different than that of an Asian Australian. Since my background is in the United States, I will concentrate solely on the immigrant experience to the United States. The important thing is to understand the historical context and circumstances of each wave of immigration and place your character’s family in the milieu you choose.
So, come along, brave romance writer, and let’s show the world that love truly does conquer all.
Terminology: I’m going to use the terms white, black, Asian, and Hispanic. I know there are objections to each of these terms and in the future, one or more of these may be deemed unacceptable. However, as of this writing, 2020, these are the terms used most frequently in journalism, except for Hispanic where the alternatives, Latino has a gender, and brown is too vague.
Disclaimer: All the opinions in this book are mine only and are meant to give insight into writing romance characters. The writing advice is meant to be helpful and only reflects the scope of my immediate observations. No claims are made about usefulness or anything else. Use at your own risk. Aloha!
Why Write Romance with Asian Characters?
As a writer, you are always writing characters other
than yourself, and yet, through your muse or subconscious, you are always writing yourself in some way, shape, or form. You may be writing characters of a different gender, different age groups, and different walks of life from your own experience, but you can’t help imbuing your own world view and life experiences into your character’s personality.
While you desire to expand the types of characters to portray, especially as main characters, you might have been wary of crossing certain racial and cultural lines because you feel you cannot adequately avoid the minefields of writing characters with backgrounds different from your own. You forge on, though, because you want to be true to your characters and also convey their feelings and thoughts in a way that honors where they come from.
I truly respect each and every writer who tackles characters from different backgrounds because I feel it is a necessity to have as many voices to tell the stories of underrepresented characters as possible. The danger of a single story is too evident and results in stereotypes and segmentation—the othering of underrepresented people.
The current marketplace is a messy one, and you’ll hear different opinions on whether you as a writer of a certain background can write about characters from other backgrounds. Each of us comes from a unique perspective and carry with us ingrained cultural norms that may or may not be helpful or interpreted properly with the everchanging values of society. Yet, we cannot avoid issues of the historical and current context of both the world at large and the publishing industry in English-speaking countries where fiction and literature are dominated by white heroes and heroines. White cultural values are the default, and white faces are considered mainstream with maybe a smidgen or smattering of nonwhite characters as sidekicks and minor flyby characters.
This was the status quo in the twentieth century, when the biggest literary hits, blockbuster movies, and popular culture were dominated by white producers, writers, and publishers. Thankfully, in the twenty-first century, writers and creative types are making a concerted move to include stories with the marginalized cultures of underrepresented characters and people groups.
Romance, in particular, has been caught in a time warp of homogeneous and mainstream
characters, populating entire towns, sports teams, secret agent operatives, and fire departments as all white. While many romance authors are motivated to include characters from other backgrounds into their novels, they may be afraid of getting things wrong or they don’t want to shake up their fans with a multicultural romance.
You have a choice to make.
You can either continue to write all white communities and you will likely sell well in the time being, or you can embrace the diversity around us and sell into the future to where the audience is going. You can also create the future of romance writing with your voice of inclusion and take the other
into the ordinary.
Which is the goal, after all, isn’t it?
You will be writing into a large and fast-growing emerging market of Asian heritage readers as well as people interested in reading stories with multifaceted characters and settings. Blockbuster hits like Crazy Rich Asians and the Oscar-winning South Korean movie, Parasite, show that the English-speaking market is not only ready but enthusiastic for Asian heritage stories.
People with Asian heritage encompass a large proportion of the world’s population and are the fastest growing immigrant group in the English-speaking world.
In the United States, the Asian population grew 7 percent between 2000 and 2015 (from 11.9 million to 20.4 million), the fastest growth rate of any major racial or ethnic group.
Similarly, Canadians of Asian origin are the largest and fastest growing group, comprising roughly 18 percent of the population. In Australia, Asian Australians are 16 percent of the population, and Australia is the preferred destination for emigrating Hongkongers.
Asian Americans have an estimated 6.2 percent of the total U.S. buying power, roughly $1 trillion, and their buying power has increased 267 percent since 2000, making the Asian American market the fastest-growing minority market in the United States.
Asian Americans are a multifarious group, representing people from many regions. Countries as diverse as India, Pakistan, Vietnam, Georgia, Philippines, China, Maldives, Japan, Nepal, Korea, Uzbekistan, Malaysia, Mongolia, Armenia, and even Afghanistan are included in the category of Asian.
Many Western/English-speaking cities have significant percentages of residents with Asian backgrounds: Metro Vancouver (43 percent), San Francisco (33 percent), London, England (21 percent), Metro Toronto (35 percent), Calgary (23 percent) and Sydney, Australia (19 percent).
Asians in Western countries are also increasingly prominent in politics, arts and entertainment, education, business, and popular culture. They hold occupations from farm worker to professional, small business owner to unionized labor, and represent every socioeconomic level.
One glaring area where Asians in Western countries are not represented is the romance novel.
The purpose of this book is to encourage contemporary romance writers to include Asian characters in your romance novels. You might have Asian heritage or you are non-Asian, and you are keenly interested in increasing the representation of Asian characters in your novels.
You are also aware that a multitude of stories and characters defeats the common stereotypes. You enjoy exploring the lives of characters with various outlooks, and you strive to make all of your characters distinct individuals.
You are an ally to racial harmony