Feeling seen

 

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What do you most enjoy about reading? The opportunity to learn about a different time or place? To escape into a fictional world? The satisfaction of a good thriller or crime story?

For me, part of the joy of reading is seeing myself in the pages of a book. The moment when I have to pause my reading because it feels like the author has reached inside my head and written down my exact thoughts or feelings. And expressed them more coherently than I could ever do. Maybe it’s a character who shares my deepest concerns, or a relationship that sums up how I feel about a best friend or a bully.

It’s such a powerful experience. I feel validated. Someone else has felt like this, thought like this. I’m not alone.

It’s a regular experience in Bible reading, God often speaks to me like this. I hope you find that too.

The characters that we relate to in the Bible are very different to ourselves; living in a different time and culture. That doesn’t stop God from using them to speak to our twentieth century world.


 

It’s the same in fiction. That experience of being ‘seen’ can occur when reading about people like us, or people very different from us. A good writer helps us to find the shared humanity in characters wherever they live and whatever they look like; allowing us to relate to hobbits or centaurs or even Martians from the year 3056. To an Edwardian servant or a medieval wise woman; an Ethiopian businessman or an Indonesian schoolgirl.

The character you most relate to doesn’t need to be like you. People who look like you may have very different personalities and life experiences; they may feel as unrelatable as we’d imagine a stone age woman or futuristic robot to be.

So why is it so important that fiction portrays a range of races, religions, ages, disabilities, sexualities...?

Because we all need to see ourselves somewhere in what we read. Seeing can mean feeling understood. But it also means looking alike, or sharing experiences. In contemporary fiction, that means a racially and culturally diverse cast. In other genres it might be more subtle, but good fantasy or sci-fi will reflect the best and worst of society: characters from the fringes being valued for what they can contribute; mixed race relationships overcoming prejudice, etc.

What do you think? Do you see yourself in the books you read? And can others see themselves in what you write?


Comments

  1. Great post, Kathryn. Your opening question made me think of various genres and maybe I'm drawn to plot and personality. I don't think I've ever stopped to think in terms of being seen, but, of course, it's been there all along. The characters we latch on to are not entirely 'other'; something created the link. Interesting. Thank you.

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  2. Kathryn Scherer24 June 2025 at 16:50

    thanks John. It's interesting how, as writers, we create that link between very different people.

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  3. Lovely post, Kathryn. Thanks. It's helpful to be reminded to reflect a diverse range of characters in our writing. That definitely helps readers see through the perspectives of others rather than what they are familiar with. I guess that is why God made us all unique, as you implied. Blessings.

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  4. Interestingly, I hardly ever see myself in fictional characters. Perhaps only one: Judith in Rosamond Lehman's 1927 novel Dusty Answer (which many see as an influence on Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited). There are characters I identify with, sure. But I read mainly for enrichment and immersion in another world. As long as the author makes me care about her/his characters, I'm not bothered whether I see myself in them or not.

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