In the past, literature and science were usually divided to two separate domains. Literature was the repository of rhetoric, subjectivity, and fiction, whereas science was the repository of "plain" language, objectivity, and fact. The "modernist" vision of science writing, which was treated as a transparent, clear pane of glass, simply reflecting the objective "reality", has dominated social scientific thinking. Until recently, this view has been seriously challenged. The purpose of this article is to respond to such a challenge. By introducing the concepts of narrating subject and time of narration from narratology, this article tries to answer the following question: how should we write a social scientific paper? At the end of this article, the author delineates how we expect about writing would affect what we write about.