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[personal profile] fandomnumbergenerator
I manage a memoir workshopping group, and a new member wants a more formal content warning policy (not because of specific triggers she wants to be warned for, but because she was an instructor at small liberal arts college for a semester and felt they were very useful). A long standing member of the group who has been a professor for decades is opposed to requiring trigger warnings (she has more of a 70s liberal take on most social issues, and also has seen trigger warnings used as a way to manipulate the administration into censuring adjunct professors).

The current policy is:
Writing presented in the group may contain references to or descriptions of death, illness, abuse, unhealthy family and relationship dynamics, sexual assault, racism, sexism, or homophobia, as well as explicit sex or drug use. We do not generally use trigger or content warnings, though specific warning requests will be taken seriously.

Elsewhere in the guidelines, it says that people need to briefly introduce their work before they start reading, so there should never be a situation where a potentially triggering topic is a total surprise. But the way the topics are addressed might be more graphic in one section than another.

I am working on a project about my boyfriend's death when I was 24, and the piece I brought to the group last week included a description of a dead body, and so I warned people in an email. Everyone appreciated the warning, but none of the people who actually attended the in-person meeting wanted to change the policy (the new member who wanted the change the policy wasn't there).

We are looking for new members and I am trying to craft policies that will work for people we don't already have a good working relationship with.

None of the workshopping classes I took included content warning requirements, so I feel like I don't really know where to start.

I also feel like triggers are incredibly personal. I usually use "Creator Chose Not to Use Archive Warnings" on AO3 because almost every story I write has some fleeting reference to the character having sex when they were under 18 or some past traumatic experience.

And in my memoir writing, I'm still grappling with what to call things. Like what level of creepiness on my father's part requires a trigger warning? When I am still trying to come up with a stable way to frame my experiences for myself.

Date: 2019-03-27 01:11 pm (UTC)
kara_mckay: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kara_mckay
It sounds like you're really figuring this thing out! And, I think you're right on the mark with the distinction between triggers and squicks, and how they work in this setting. Having to slap a warning on part of my life experience because someone finds it icky would distress hell out of me. This might be something really good and useful to talk with your group about -- the idea that saying, "Writing about X is just nasty," or "I don't want to hear about X because it grosses me out," is the opposite of helpful, but saying, "I'm not sure that this way of describing X is getting it across in the way that you want," is constructive. And, it might not be a bad idea to talk with them about what a trigger actually is. I don't know about real life, but online it surely does seem that quite a lot of people think it's just an all-purpose word for any negative response to anything a person sees that they don't like.

Date: 2019-03-27 04:44 pm (UTC)
kara_mckay: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kara_mckay
Sorry -- I kinda lost track of the "written" part of guidelines. Loss of focus and forgetfulness are features of my particular malfunction.

I think your new guidelines look good. To me, they show concerns for the individual and a safe, confidential route for individuals with triggers to follow while also providing general category warnings, requesting overviews, and stating behavior expectations. It looks like you've got it nailed down fairly well. I can see where you're coming from with wanting to use "squick," which is such a wonderful fit for some of what you're saying, but I have to agree that it's also a very fandom specific word. Shame it never caught on anywhere else.

I hope this all works out for you and your group!

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