Continuing on the themes of starting
out with an idea, I think it’s going to nourish your inspiration and exercise
your brain if we have a little talk about Originality. I’ve gotten into
numerous debates with creators about the definition and application about this
word, so first I’m going to encourage you.
BE ORIGINAL. Make sure that at the
end of the day you can cast your proud signature on your masterpiece with the
complete knowledge that it is utterly yours, something researched, developed,
manufactured and strategized in your brain.
Now I’m going to shed some light on
the subject.
Let’s define originality first, shall
we?
The top Google definition result for
originality defines it as: “the ability to think independently and creatively”
OR, “the quality of being novel or unusual.” Dictionary.com, Cambridge,
Vocabulary.com, and Merriam Webster all express this definition in a similar
way: A quality, a power, or a trait. But…uh oh. Macmillan takes it farther by
saying “the quality of
being new, interesting,
and different from
anything that anyone has created before”.
So herein lies the debate. We have
a divide between a relative and absolute interpretation of the
word.
Macmillan Dictionary, as well as a
large population of artists, writers and the general public, argue that
originality is only applied in the absolute context. It is only a yes or no. All
or nothing. This means that if one iota of your manuscript is derived from
something else, even if it’s lavished with groundbreaking territory, it is not
original.
But consider this, almost none of
the adjectives we use in the English language convey an absolute purity or
coherence to its word. You can call a movie “good” even if it has some
improvable spots. You can call a sundae “sweet” even if it has some chopped
walnuts. You can call your day “hectic” if the first 30 minutes was mellow, and
You can call a shirt “red” even if the hue isn’t R: 255 G: 0 B:0. See?
In the same way, content doesn’t need to be perfectly original to be original.
Consider I want to paint an “original”
concept. I’ll paint a horse. Been done a million times before. Let’s make it a
blaring red-orange Pegasus whose coat was made of fire. On top of that, let me
paint some tortured and wounded farmers who were attacked by said Pegasus for
their unethical treatment of animals.
See what I did there? Have you heard of an
equestrian incarnation of a Phoenix who served as a vigilante to exact justice
on abused farm animals everywhere?
Though if you broke up the parts of
the concept: Horse, Phoenix, Vigilante, some may say it isn’t “original”
because I didn’t invent any of those concepts. But the combination certainly
has not been conceived or illustrated by the vast vast majority of the population.
THIS, here is originality. And with
continuing your train of thought and letting your imagination run wild, you can
take a very very simplistic concept and transform it into something marvelously
original over time. So keep writing and keep scheming!