2017 Weekly Writing Log, Part 41
Nov. 13th, 2017 04:40 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
- I finished, edited, and posted the fourth chapter of The Price of Wisdom. Dear god I just want this story to be over and done with.
- The editor of the novella-length translation I just submitted an introduction for wanted me to reformat the translation itself. Because the manuscript is fairly long, this took a while.
- I submitted a short essay about the online debates surrounding Hetalia to a certain publication back in the spring of 2014. The editor thought that my argument, which was essentially that the rhetorical violence of these debates marked a critical turning point in fandom, was a bit too farfetched to publish. Now, however, it seems that maybe I might have had a point, so she asked me to update the essay and resubmit it – which I did, gladly.
- I carried a whole host of bad feelings with me throughout the week, and at a certain point I became so distracted and distressed that I decided to sit down and process my anxiety by drawing. I therefore gave myself an assignment to create a three-hour comic: one hour to draw it, one hour to ink it, and one hour to scan and color it. Despite being an obvious rush job, the result of this experiment isn't that bad, all things considered. Maybe I should do more of these?
- The editor of the novella-length translation I just submitted an introduction for wanted me to reformat the translation itself. Because the manuscript is fairly long, this took a while.
- I submitted a short essay about the online debates surrounding Hetalia to a certain publication back in the spring of 2014. The editor thought that my argument, which was essentially that the rhetorical violence of these debates marked a critical turning point in fandom, was a bit too farfetched to publish. Now, however, it seems that maybe I might have had a point, so she asked me to update the essay and resubmit it – which I did, gladly.
- I carried a whole host of bad feelings with me throughout the week, and at a certain point I became so distracted and distressed that I decided to sit down and process my anxiety by drawing. I therefore gave myself an assignment to create a three-hour comic: one hour to draw it, one hour to ink it, and one hour to scan and color it. Despite being an obvious rush job, the result of this experiment isn't that bad, all things considered. Maybe I should do more of these?