- Joined
- Feb 20, 2005
- Location
- South of the North 40
THis is a thread intended to point people towards creating a believable and accurate persona, so any ideas or suggestions... put them here.
The Importance of a good Persona
The importance of a well-researched and well-constructed persona is vital to creating a believable impression. Everyone has a past but what we need to know is what kind of past do we wish to portray? Many re-enactors decide to portray a farmer, but to portray a farmer basic knowledge about 19th Century farming techniques are necessary. A farmer would know when to plant and harvest different crops. How to work a horse or a team of horses. It is important to know good arable soil from poor soil. There is much more to being a farmer than just saying you were a farmer in civilian life.
How about being a blacksmith? All a re-enactor needs to know is how to beat iron into horseshoes right. Not even remotely. A 19th century Blacksmith was an artisan of the highest order capable of making everything from oxen shoes to iron hinges. A working knowledge of the color of iron when it is ready to be worked, how to use different types of hammers and other tools is vital. How about portraying a carpenter? That should be easy. Again: not even remotely. Again, a working knowledge of the tools of the trade is necessary. Do you know the difference between a Trying Plane and a Hollow Plane, a Bow saw and a Ripsaw or an Ax and an Adz? In other words, some research is not only necessary; it is vital to making a believable persona.
Research into what skills were utilized by a 19th century citizen is vital. John Seymour's excellent book <u>The Forgotten Arts & Crafts</u> is an excellent start for garnering the knowledge necessary to portray a period skill. There are other books out there and visiting places like Kelly Farm in Elk River Minnesota and seeing and touching period tools and crops is yet another place to learn a bit about your period skills and profession.
There is much more to a persona than a set of skills that help to flesh out a profession. Every man has a family. Who are they and where are they? How many relatives and how close are they? Has the family been afflicted by disease and wiped out? Are they desperately waiting for you to send some of your pay home so that they can fight off creditors? How often do they write, are they educated? Are you or they first generation immigrants? What do they think of the current (1860's) political situation and the War itself? There are hosts of questions that need to be asked and answered. To understand the men who fought and died in the Civil War we have to be able to realize that they were men with lives beyond those of a Volunteer soldier.
The more we learn about accurately portraying a person of the times the more we realize how little we actually know.
The Importance of a good Persona
The importance of a well-researched and well-constructed persona is vital to creating a believable impression. Everyone has a past but what we need to know is what kind of past do we wish to portray? Many re-enactors decide to portray a farmer, but to portray a farmer basic knowledge about 19th Century farming techniques are necessary. A farmer would know when to plant and harvest different crops. How to work a horse or a team of horses. It is important to know good arable soil from poor soil. There is much more to being a farmer than just saying you were a farmer in civilian life.
How about being a blacksmith? All a re-enactor needs to know is how to beat iron into horseshoes right. Not even remotely. A 19th century Blacksmith was an artisan of the highest order capable of making everything from oxen shoes to iron hinges. A working knowledge of the color of iron when it is ready to be worked, how to use different types of hammers and other tools is vital. How about portraying a carpenter? That should be easy. Again: not even remotely. Again, a working knowledge of the tools of the trade is necessary. Do you know the difference between a Trying Plane and a Hollow Plane, a Bow saw and a Ripsaw or an Ax and an Adz? In other words, some research is not only necessary; it is vital to making a believable persona.
Research into what skills were utilized by a 19th century citizen is vital. John Seymour's excellent book <u>The Forgotten Arts & Crafts</u> is an excellent start for garnering the knowledge necessary to portray a period skill. There are other books out there and visiting places like Kelly Farm in Elk River Minnesota and seeing and touching period tools and crops is yet another place to learn a bit about your period skills and profession.
There is much more to a persona than a set of skills that help to flesh out a profession. Every man has a family. Who are they and where are they? How many relatives and how close are they? Has the family been afflicted by disease and wiped out? Are they desperately waiting for you to send some of your pay home so that they can fight off creditors? How often do they write, are they educated? Are you or they first generation immigrants? What do they think of the current (1860's) political situation and the War itself? There are hosts of questions that need to be asked and answered. To understand the men who fought and died in the Civil War we have to be able to realize that they were men with lives beyond those of a Volunteer soldier.
The more we learn about accurately portraying a person of the times the more we realize how little we actually know.