Writing is not a fanciful venture. It is the most meaningful, purest step forward in your own personal art. Do not diminish the importance and power in your own fingers tapping at your keyboard or wrapped around a pencil. This is the moment in which you embrace the might of your creation.
Karuna Riazi is an online diversity advocate, essayist and overwhelmed undergrad student. Her debut novel, The Gauntlet of Blood and Sand, will be released in 2017 under Simon and Schuster’s new Salaam Reads imprint.
Writer’s Care Packages from Camp NaNoWriMo and We Need Diverse Books.
(via nanowrimo)
Shake up the happiness. A well written theme from Coca Cola to promote its brand... What is a brand? A person's gut feeling about a product, service or organization, according to Marty Neumeier in his book The Brand Gap.
Take one and start to create!
P
Pain of my life
Panic at the Laundromat
Paper cuts
Paper hearts (easy to tear)
Past mistakes
Peer-pressured
People we met in supermarkets
People will talk (no matter what)
Perfect moment to forget
Perfect little angel
Perhaps someday
Pest control
Pillow talk
Pinky promises
Playing favourites
Pocket full of sorrow
Pour me a drink (or two or more)
Power of kisses
Praying to her body
Pressed flowers and love letters
Pretty little lies
Pride and Problems
Primal Instinct
Promises made, promises kept
Pushing boundaries
♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡
Q
Qualifications to kick ass
Qualified answers to unqualified questions
Quality content
Quantity over quality
Questionable taste
Questioning the status quo
Quarantine with the enemy
Quarrels over nothing
Quintessentially the two of us
Quiet nights together
Quite a spectacle
Quite the catch
Quick decisions
Quoting the classics
Queen of messing up
Queendom comes
Quests and how to avoid them
Quickening the appetite
Quivering (keep me warm)
Quivering with emotions
Questionnaire for a partner
Quitting unhealthy habits
♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡
R
Rain clouds over your head
Rain on our parade
Rainy days at the sea
Raw power
Ready for whatever
Real people, real problems
Reality check
Reality comes back for you
Rebellion in her blood
Religious experience
Reputation to uphold
Rescue’s on the way
Reunions (and how to avoid them)
Reunited with my love
Rights and wrongs
Rising to the top (where we belong)
Romance is not dead (yet)
Rose-tinted glasses
Rosy dreams
Royal pain in the ass
Ruby eyes
Ruin me (please)
Ruins of us
Rules of friends-with-benefits
Ruling over her kingdom
Find more titles: A-C|D-F|G-I|J-L|M-O|S-T|U-V|W-X|Y-Z + Numbers
>>All the Fic Titles.
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Gender is a central concept in modern societies. However, gender gaps are still a wide-spread phenomenon. While gender gaps in education and health have been decreasing remarkably over time and their differences across countries have been narrowing, gender gaps in the labour market and in politics are more persistent and still vary largely across countries.
The following ten facts, written by Paola Profeta (Associate Professor in Public Economics at Università Bocconi), help shed light on the gender-gap problem:
Gender gaps have historical roots: These roots can be traced back to the organization of the family and to traditional agricultural practices.
Culture matters in determining gender gaps: Gender stereotypes are well-established, both among men and among women.
Men and women have different attitudes and behaviours: On average women are significantly less likely than men to make risky choices and to engage competition.
Maternity does not explain it all: There is no trade-off between fertility and female employment – but maternity is a penalty in the labour market.
Education is the first engine of gender equality: Women and men are currently equally educated, and women often surpass male educational attainments in developed countries.
Gender gaps in employment and the glass ceiling are different phenomena - although they often go hand-in-hand.
Labour demand is as important as individuals’ choices: Firms’ decisions, employers’ attitudes and beliefs, are as important as individuals’ incentives and choices.
Institutions play a crucial role in supporting female employment: Family policies, parental leave, and formal child care provisions may help supporting female labour supply.
Institutions play a crucial role in determining the glass ceiling: How to promote female leadership and the presence of women in top positions is a highly debated issue.
Women’s empowerment and economic development are interrelated: Economic development improves women’s conditions and reduces inequality – and the involvement of women in the economy is a key engine for growth.
For more information about gender inequality, check out Paola Profeta’s article on the OUPblog.
Image Credit: ‘Office, Tax, Business’, Image by FirmBee, CC0 Public Domain, via Pixabay.
Remembering those times, when we use to take care of each other and sing a song... it didn"t matter, a guitar or an organ but something really meaninguful...
Se conducian con sistemas binarios 0 y 1; cero por NO y 1 por SI. Vivian en un mundo feliz y robotizado; no sabian que la malfuncion o dano era parte de la condicion misma de la existencia del ser humano. Pero ellos eran perfectos, y les gustaba su felicidad robotizada de 0 y 1.
Todos piensan en cambiar el mundo, pero nadie piensa en cambiarse a sí mismo.
Leo Tolstoy (via elcielosobremi)
I have a few stories on the back burner but one that I'm trying to wrap my head around is about two characters who find themselves as leaders of their kingdoms. Both characters are juxtaposed with conflicting worldviews, and personality traits which has them hating each other. The issue I'm having is finding their purpose. Stuff that they believe in. I'm a little worried that these two characters will just end up being 2-dimensional.
You have a good start to the story, but there needs to be a conflict. The conflict can't just be that they hate each other. What is the problem that needs to be solved in their external world and/or their internal worlds? That's the conflict.
These characters have conflicting worldviews, but what does that actually mean in your story? What are the issues in these kingdoms or in the story world where these characters stand in moral opposition? A good example would be in A Song of Ice and Fire, when Daenerys Targaryen came into power, she was opposed to slavery, which put her in opposition with the many leaders in Essos who upheld it. Another example would be the members of the rebellion in The Hunger Games, who were opposed to the brutal and oppressive regimes of the Capitol, which put the rebels in opposition with the current President Snow and his regime.
Without a conflict, you don't have a story. But the conflict doesn't have to be a problem in the character's exterior world. It could be a problem within the characters themselves. For example, you could do an exploration of the internal conflicts at the heart of their worldviews (or perhaps as a result of them), and then do a change arc with each character where they change for the better or worse as a result of the story events. And you could have these arcs happen in parallel, where they're both going through similar arcs for different reasons, or they can be opposing, where they still end up in opposite places.
By making sure your story has a conflict, you can ensure that there's a purpose to the story, and that purpose gives your characters purpose and gives your story a foundation to build upon. :)
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I’ve been writing seriously for over 30 years and love to share what I’ve learned. Have a writing question? My inbox is always open!
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