Home Literature Stories Movies Games Comics Blogs News Discussion Forum Art Gallery
  Science Fiction and Fantasy News
MORE AUTHORS CONFIRMED FOR DISCOVER FESTIVAL (01-27)
Angry Robot's Open Door Month returns (01-25)
New Event, Leicestershire, England (01-08)
Dark Hall Press - new Horror Fiction imprint, (11-03)

Official sffworld Reviews
Juggernaut by Adam Baker (02-12 - Book)
Necropath by Eric Brown (02-06 - Book)
Blue Remembered Earth by Alastair Reynolds (02-06 - Book)
WOOL by Hugh Howey (02-02 - Book)


Site Index

    Bookmark and Share


View Full Version :

How Asian Fantasy Differs From Europe


Pages : [1] 2

KatG
June 18th, 2006, 07:26 PM
Just thought I'd start a new topic, where we can talk about not only Kevin's work, but other works with non-Europe settings -- Asia, Africa, jungles, etc.

Although Kevin's world is imaginary and the locales symbolically significant in their cultures, the Asian, particularly Japanese, influences are definitely there. The idea of a spiritual quest following a lantern, the rituals, and the Deishi monks, are all elements that create an atmosphere very different from merry old England or European cities.

What unusual elements interested you in the Tonogato books, or in some other fantasy work?

Rocket Sheep
June 18th, 2006, 09:41 PM
Old Japan was much cleaner and more sophisticated than old Europe. :D

Medieval Europe always has to have an element of squallor and perversion in it for me to believe it and too often it doesn't... it's like a romantic idyllic version of something and that's never going to make me suspend disbelief.

With all the rituals and culture that old Japan possessed I find it easier to believe in the worlds of Tongato despite the magical city, secret powers, etc. As long as there's a bit of mud and a bit of rotting cabbage in the marketplace, the odd grubby old corruptible perverted greedy man, I'm there.

Sponsor ads
Radthorne
June 19th, 2006, 01:34 AM
As long as there's a bit of mud and a bit of rotting cabbage in the marketplace, the odd grubby old corruptible perverted greedy man, I'm there.
Excellent point - and I think it's a nuance that, as you say, does sometimes gets lost in fantasy books. Societies of any size tend to have diversity, and it isn't always pretty diversity - social differences can frequently be economic differences as well, and showing how "the other half lives" alongside that of your nobles and your well-to-do can bring additional breadth to one's stories.

Hereford Eye
June 19th, 2006, 09:32 AM
Consider:
Tonogato series - Radical Thorn
Number Ten Ox series - Barry Hughart
Initiate Brother series - Sean Russell
Tales of the Otori - Lian Hearn
Chaos side of the Recluse series - L.E. Modisett, Jr.

The common denominator seems to me the ritualized societies, the courtesies rendered and accepted, the feel of the societies described. THere are good guys and and bad guys, ruthlessness and treachery, but it all transpires against a backdrop of manners.
And the acceptance of magic in the world as right and proper; you just must look for it.

Probably better argued in good old GW's threads, but these books appeal to my view that there isn't an absolute good and evil to consider, but there is chaos and order, and there must be a balance between them.

Radthorne
June 19th, 2006, 10:26 AM
Probably better argued in good old GW's threads, but these books appeal to my view that there isn't an absolute good and evil to consider, but there is chaos and order, and there must be a balance between them.
Ah! My own philosophy thread! :D

I can't speak for the other authors, of course, but it is certainly true that if one is attempting to capture an Asian aspect, the Taoist concepts of yin and yang, and the duality of good and evil, is a rather ever-present influence. It is a difficult concept for many Westerners to deal with, as our own cultural influence tends to paint good and evil as absolutes. The idea that "light" cannot exist unless there is a corresponding "dark" by which to contrast it is a simple thought in theory, but one that opens up a whole Pandora's box of implications.

For the writer, though, it also creates different vistas upon which to paint your characters. Rather than just the typical "we're all gonna kick the bad guy's butt" you have an opportunity to explore the potentially darker side of your good guys as well. And this doesn't necessarily mean the "deep dark secret" sort of thing, which is too easy to portray as separate and apart from your character's "good" nature; but actually looking at their "good" actions and seeing if there is a dark side to them, or if others perceive them as a dark side. When Shiko confronts the Darkness in The Sands of Sabakushi, that is of course precisely what happens to him - his actions have not changed, but he is presented with a different "view" of those same actions, and must try to step outside himself to determine if what he's done is what he really thinks he's done, or is simply a veneer of rationality that he's used to paint over his deeds.

KatG
June 19th, 2006, 06:26 PM
And Kij Johnson's Japanese novels, which I always bring up when people start whining about how nobody is doing anything different. Caitlin Sweet's world also is more Arab and tribal than West European, and Scott Bakker brings in the Byzantine in his. There's a lot of interest in Arab culture stories, at the moment. (Kevin's stories mix in the Arab, nomadic cultures with the Asian, which I think makes a nice contrast.) What about contemporary fantasy stories -- we've got stories in Tokyo as well as London. Gaiman brought in the African Anasazi stuff, etc.

I think fantasy always has a lot of the political to it, and non-European-based fantasy gives a whole other set of political situations to deal with. What's fun about Kevin's books, is that the various kingdoms each represent different forms of governance, different choices people can make. That does have a correlation with European issues, and for that matter, modern issues, but also other parts of the world.

Do we see American-set fantasy as just an extension of European, or is it fundamentally different? Anyone read a South American fantasy, besides the magic realists?

I also don't think most fantasy stories are as black and white as people assume they are, but that's another topic.

Hereford Eye
June 19th, 2006, 11:21 PM
Just shows the memory is going: recently read The Fox Woman and it is one of the better books I've read. How could I forget that one when compiling my list? Not too surprising as I read and critiqued the Tonogato series and now remember it only in bits and pieces. Same is true for Hughart and Russell.

Maybe most fantasy stories are not digital, as Katherine the Great suggests. However, Tolkien was content to give Sauron a little background at the beginning; after that he is just a malign presence, as are the Nazgul and the Balrog. So, he gets placed squarely in the good vs evil camp.
I only got through the first of Bakker's and discovered he is not for me so I can't comment further.
Mieville certainly does not go in for the good vs evil, has more shades than Hades. I think Donaldson's First Chronicles were pretty much good versus evil in framework though Covenant himself represented a stirring conflict of the two. Donaldson's Gap series definitely wasn't.

My first novel takes one side of a war to present the opening battles. The second book went over to the other side to look at things from their point of view. The third intended to look at the whole mess from a third party's viewpoint. But, then, I wasn't interested so much in telling a grand epic as I was investigating what I think the terms duty, honor, and country mean. Turns out I have a few disagreements with MacArthur.

And, I'd rewrite them now before attempting to sell them. I've changed my mind again about what I think because of the order and chaos, yin and yang direction my thinking has gone.

Radthorne
June 20th, 2006, 09:52 AM
But, then, I wasn't interested so much in telling a grand epic as I was investigating what I think the terms duty, honor, and country mean.... I'd rewrite them now before attempting to sell them. I've changed my mind again about what I think because of the order and chaos, yin and yang direction my thinking has gone.
Good call. ;) The sort of battles you fight, and your reasons for them, are likely to be quite different depending on which of these two perspectives (one more Western-oriented, the other more Eastern-oriented) you might choose to adopt to tell your tale.

And, of course, as a mirror to historical reality, it would also be quite fascinating (Note to Rocketsheep: close your browser, mutliple POV statement approaching) to include both of those concepts, using your original thought of showing the POV of each side. However, I think it could potentially be more powerful to not break such POV's into sequential books, but interweave them together; such would give you the opportunity to really explore how simple misunderstandings, misinterpretations, and differing world views can lead to tragic consequences on the larger stage. By bringing the two opposing "world views" together at one time, the reader will be able to see the tragedy approaching, and the simplicity with which it could be solved if only each side could understand the other. But of course, obstinancy would hold sway, just as in the real world...

You have two weeks to complete this assignment. Pencils up.... begin! :D

Hereford Eye
June 20th, 2006, 10:38 AM
Wrote elsewhere about Lawrence Durell's Alexandria Quartet which looks at the same story from four different character's POV in four different books. I didn't attempt that. First book deals with prelim battles. Second book has different cast at a time parallel to and after first book events. Third book is parallel but on a different stage.

But, you do have me thinking. I'm not certain the world is ready for that.

Okay, here is the other side of the coin. It will answer a bit of KatG's questions as well.
http://www.sffworld.com/community/story/1659p0.html

Radthorne
June 21st, 2006, 12:47 AM
Aha! I did wonder a bit about the ending of the first one. It all becomes clear now...

And the yin and yang aspects of this pair of stories are very clear as well... :D

 

Latest

Juggernaut by Adam Baker
02-12 - Book Review
Necropath by Eric Brown
02-06 - Book Review
Blue Remembered Earth by Alastair Reynolds
02-06 - Book Review
WOOL by Hugh Howey
02-02 - Book Review
Molly Fyde and the Parsona Rescue by Hugh Howey
02-02 - Book Review
Rogue Moon by Algis Budrys
02-01 - Book Review
Interview with Hugh Howey
02-01 - Interview
Tau Ceti by Kevin Anderson
01-31 - Book Review
Well of Sorrows by Benjamin Tate
01-31 - Book Review
Dead in the Water by Sandy Mitchell
01-31 - Book Review
Interview with Myke Cole Part 2
01-29 - Interview
MORE LEADING AUTHORS CONFIRMED FOR DISCOVER FESTIVAL
01-27 - News
Interview with Myke Cole
01-25 - Interview
Angry Robot's Open Door Month returns
01-25 - News
Rise of Empire by Michael J. Sullivan
01-24 - Book Review
Empire State by Adam Christopher
01-21 - Book Review
Control Point by Myke Cole
01-17 - Book Review
Seven Princes by John R. Fultz
01-11 - Book Review
The Emperor's Knife by Mazarkis Williams
01-10 - Book Review
New Event, Leicestershire, England
01-08 - News
SFFWorld Review of the Year 2011: Part 3
01-06 - Article
The Recollection by Gareth L. Powell
01-03 - Book Review
Zombies: A Compendium of the Living Dead by Otto Penzler
01-02 - Book Review
SFFWorld Review of the Year, 2011: Part 2
01-02 - Article
SFFWorld Review of the Year 2011: Part 1
12-30 - Article
SFFWorld Review of the Year 2011: Part 1
12-30 - Article
Seed by Rob Ziegler
12-28 - Book Review
Who Goes There? by John W. Campbell
12-27 - Book Review
Conan the Indomitable by Robert E. Howard
12-24 - Book Review
The Astounding, the Amazing and the Unknown by Paul Malmont
12-24 - Book Review

New Forum Posts




About - Advertising - Contact us - RSS - For Authors & Publishers - Contribute / Submit - Privacy Policy - Community Login
Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use. The contents of this webpage are copyright © 1997-2011 sffworld.com. All Rights Reserved.