YES.

Aug. 29th, 2007 05:03 pm
rj_anderson: (Rupert - Thoughtful)
[personal profile] rj_anderson
Thanks to [livejournal.com profile] thegameiam for linking to a splendid essay by Dave Wolverton that explains the difference between literary and genre fiction, and reveals the little-known origins of the modern literary novel. It also does a very good job of explaining why I read very little so-called literary fiction, and don't feel a bit embarrassed about not writing it either:

On Writing as a Fantasist.

Date: 2007-08-29 10:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] penwiper26.livejournal.com
Yes. Wolverton strikes me as having perceived it as a distinction managment issue -- and that's the problem I have with canon formation(s) of the present. But even though I've said some of the exact same things, I loved my time in graduate school in English, and I appreciate what it taught me, though I learned it more or less in an oppositional way.

Also, what I don't think Wolverton quite appreciates is the fact that "political correctness" is not a specific morality. In America right now, "political correctness" is no longer what it was in the 90s; it's still used as a term of abuse for anything representable by the face of Hillary Clinton, but what's actually "correct" right now is a diffuse jingoism and a distaste for people who rock the authoritative boat. Wolverton would have done better to leave the terms "political agenda" and "political correctness" out of the discourse and say that those who hate "moralism" in literature actually hate either a) didacticism or b) moral stances that oppose their own. And, well, yeah. I hate reading stories whose moral stances oppose my own, whether lots of other people like them or not.

Date: 2007-08-29 11:23 pm (UTC)
ext_7845: (armchair)
From: [identity profile] yunitsa.livejournal.com
Good point about current "political correctness" - it all seems a bit dated, to be honest.

I'm taking a course in the Politics of the Canon this year, though I really wanted to switch to 20th Century Crime Fiction (case in point, hee), so maybe I'll have more to say on this topic after that. But yes, I do share the frustration with the way the canon is constructed around dull things, especially in schools. (And I think there's a related false link between things that are "good" and things that are "worthy of analysis", and also the idea that something can become - be redeemed as? - a "Classic" just by being more than a hundred years old - Dumas and Conan Doyle are genre, dammit.)

And now I am going to bed, honest.

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