You'll find critics who say they [the readers] have bad taste, or that they're lazy and can't hack it in the big leagues. But that's not the case. They need something they're not getting elsewhere. Let's be honest: Why do so many adults read Suzanne Collins's young-adult novel "The Hunger Games" instead of contemporary literary fiction? Because "The Hunger Games" doesn't bore them.
plot was the coward's way out, for people who can't deal with the real world. If you're having too much fun, you're doing it wrong.
A literary genre – SF or any other – ought to be understood not as a pigeonhole into which certain texts may be filed and certain others may not, but rather as an element or, still better, a tendency, which is active to a greater or lesser degree within a literary text which is itself conceptualized as a complexly structured whole.
It was hardly possible to define clearly what I have called the SF tendency until it was strongly embodied in a large amount of work explicitly published and marketed as SF: that is, the work. . . of such (modern) writers as Lem, Dick, Le Guin, Disch, Delany, Russ, Ballard, et alii. Though writers like Beckett and Kafka certainly belong more to SF than to any other genre; though the Joycean method, especially in Finnegans Wake, incorporates something of the SF tendency in its radical estrangement of the apparently smooth surface of everyday perception and consciousness.
One of the principal reasons for the dominance of criticism. . . is the disintegration of any firm notion of artistic form. . . since the object [of art]. . . becomes an occasion for a peculiar, and in the event, necessary, kind of critical activity: we generally do not discuss the value of the thing, but what it is and how we perceive it. . .
The act of aesthetic perception has turned into criticism, but a criticism almost entirely concerned with defining the object and our perception of it: in short, epistemology.
The play(s) demand that we transform ourselves – with more than a small dose of passion. We are to make connections with the world outside ourselves – with human beings who seem utterly strange, with society itself, which might seem even stranger – must we not transform ourselves first?
One thing I wondered about, is the shift toward greater attention to genre works in universities also due to generational shift?
The flat Skinnerian rationalism of Asminov’s “Foundation” trilogy and of his robot stories, or the synthesis of romantic technologism with vulgar-Nietzschean evolutionism in Clarke’s major works, however unacceptable in themselves, gain considerably if they are understood as refusals to join in the Cold War anti-Communism predominant in post war America and (though to a lesser degree) Britain: in that impoverished intellectual culture, merely to insist that a Manichaean struggle between a diabolical Moscow and an angelic Washington was not the only or most important factor shaping human affairs in itself constituted a significantly critical act.
Studies in the Literature of Popular Culture: Sf and Postmod- ernism. Sf and postmodernism have been linked in various ways in recent years. Post- modem theorists have taken up Sf to show how the traditional boundaries of genre have collapsed in the fluid new culture of postmodernity. Students of the Chaos paradigm have turned to sf texts as touchstones for understanding the transformation of Western culture into a culture of chaos, while other critics of both sf and postmodernism argue
438 SCIENCE-FICTION STUDIES, VOLUME 23 (1996) that sf has become the preeminent literary form of the postmodern era, since its generic protocols and thematic systems are able to cope with the various and drastic transformations, especially in information/simulation technologies, of the postindustrial West. It has been argued that "sf has an advantage over most other disciplines in that it has had something like a theory of postmodernism ingrained in its futurism for many years," and that "with the catastrophic failure of traditional humanistic thought, sf has rushed in with a treasury of powerful metaphors and icons capturing the reality of insecure borders: the Female Man, xenogenesis, the cyborg, the simulacrum, viral language, cyberspace, Mechs and Shapers, and many others." In this course, we will look at various texts from the past three decades which will allow us to explore the fruitful connections between sf and postmodernism. There will be comparative analyses as well as close individual readings of specific texts.
TEXTS: Banks, The Player of Games; Dick, Ubik; Fowler, Sarah Canary; Gibson, Neuromancer; Jones, White Queen; Le Guin, Fisherman of the Inland Sea; Powers, The Anubis Gates; Russ, The Female Man; Ryman, The Child Garden; Stephenson, Snow Crash; Sterling, ed, Mirrorshades; Womack, Random Acts of Senseless Violence.-Douglas Barbour, Department of English, University of Alberta, Edmonton. Canada T6G 2E5.
So what's in a Middle-Brow novel anyway?
Genre fiction is not going to smash modernism: it is a product of it.
I think it is a generational shift, but because of a current global situation and because of the legacy of postmodernism still prominent in western academia. (And Freedman quotation)
So I'm gonna hedge my bets and say that Modernism and Genre have influenced each other, but I'm not prepared to say that genre was beget of Modernism.
But I would ask you to clarify: when you refer to "generational shift," are you talking Gen X theory, or contemporaneity?
7) Pyslent then said that those particular media critics didn’t count as part of the Literary Establishment so their opinions didn’t matter.
Yep. But it will be argued that it is because you are brilliant and knowledgeable, you see. Therefore it is not difficult to you. But others, poor souls, find it difficult and run from it screaming into the arms of comfort, like, say, feminist 1970's SF that bears more than a passing resemblance to Atwood's current novel.
Grossman said:There was a time when difficult literature was exciting. T.S. Eliot once famously read to a whole football stadium full of fans. And it's still exciting—when Eliot does it. But in contemporary writers it has just become a drag.
However, Modernism began in the late 1860s, not after the 30s, when Tolkein wrote.
OK, so should I take that to mean that you regard Lord of the Rings as a Modernist text? Or, is it distinct from Modernism?
http://muse.jhu.edu/login?uri=/journals/tolkien_studies/v002/2.1mortimer.html
But Tolkien himself was a self-proclaimed anti-Modernist... Or was he?
http://www.thefreelibrary.com/"Sure...+and+Pius+X:+anti-modernism+in...-a0154698399
Regardless of Tolkien as Modernist or Anti-Modernist, he certainly wrote a book during that era. Yep he did. And that's a fact!
![]()
[...] by using outside myth he's doing a very Modernist thing. But, you're right. There's a lot of debate.![]()
These statements baffle me. Using myth is a very modernist thing?
Maybe in comparison to realists, but hardly anyone else surely?
There is a lot of debate as to whether Tolkien is a modernist? The irony.
The usual comment from its fans is that it is an epic in the line of Beowulf.
Is Beowulf now considered a modernist work too?
Maybe it's simply because I didn't take the advanced English courses on the subject so I didn't get the establishment take but authors have been doing this long before the modernists and the literary work to refer to of choice for the most part was the Bible. Before there was Ulysses, the book to show off on one's bookshelf was The Pilgrim's Progress. So I don't see the self-consciously referring to an extant literary work as particularly modernist either.Using myth in and of itself is not exclusively Modernist. However, self-consciously referring to a extant literary work within your own work (to borrow certain symbols or forms, to draw certain parallels, to disrupt certain meanings, to enter into discourse on the matter, etc) is a particularly Modernist thing to do.
What a convenient way to keep it all in the family! You must read this work with the literary quality seal of approval to fully appreciate the deeper meanings and nuance of this other work with a literary quality seal of approval. Wash, rinse, repeat. Someone familiar with marketing techniques and keeping the customer hooked would appreciate the sales pitch. None of the books on their then have nearly as much value unless appreciated in the context of all the rest, therefore you should buy the whole set.The advent of mass-production was seen as greatly cheapening the value of art. Thus, how we value art had to be changed. Instead of appreciating the object of art itself (which is easily copied), the focus shifted to the import, meaning, connotation, and connection of that object to the subject as the conduit to experience art. Then, the Modernist could take those semantic elements and weave them into their own text as referent.
That's the whole debate we've just had on what "literary" means. This sort of intertextual transaction is one that can only take place if the reader has read some/most/all the same works that the author is drawing into their text. Indeed, part of the evolution of Modernism was the realization that each member of the audience will come to the text with a different body knowledge, and this is where the idea that "no one ever reads the same book, nor the same book twice" comes from. The reader is a subject, and the subject evolves, and each subject is different and evolves differently, therefore causing each experiencing of the text to be different from the one before.
As an academic during the Modern era, Tolkien contributed greatly to Modernist discourse. Perhaps the best example, he coined the term "Mythopoeia," and insisted it was the proper genre name for Lord of the Rings. This is the notion of taking the semantic, formal, and structural elements of historical mythology and shaping them into modern artificial mythologies
[...]
Which is a decidedly Modernist thing to do, even though Tolkien regarded himself as anti-Modern. I'm not sure, however, whether he went so far as to call himself a Realist, but he is certainly involved in that tradition of discourse, too, whether in his own right or by way of CS Lewis.
What, for example, is the reason for the title of Joyce's Ulysses? The story follows a mythological structure. It's both mythopoetic and modernist.
TS Eliot's The Waste Land, Woolf's To The Lighthouse and Orlando, and more... These are seminal Modernist texts that also happen to be purposely mythopoetic.
Even Borges is typically regarded as having accepted the mythopoetic concept -- even though he was in many ways an anti-Modernist, the mythopoetic and ultraism concepts are closely linked.
Have not encountered the term ultraism, and quite frankly associate the first group of terms more with painting than with literature. Realism I associate with neoclassical painting and the really boring character sketches one finds from Anton Chekhov or Gustave Flaubert. Modernism I associate with more abstract art so dadaism and surrealism might qualify depending on intent and if not I will take it as more postmodern.If I may: Where do you place Dadism, Surrealism, Ultraism, and Impressionism -- with Modernism, or Realism?
So I don't see the self-consciously referring to an extant literary work as particularly modernist either.
I can't find much Realism in LOTR.
Tolkien had no interest in exploring the real emotional states of his characters, their existence in relation to one another and their groups, or genuine political or economic relationships between people or nations. They are simply not Realistic as Realism is understood in literature.
While the mythological elements in the post-realist literature of the moderns might provide some superficial similarity, Tolkien's books are not inherently structured like Modernist works. Whereas Tolkien's plotting and characters serve primarily to further the illustration of his fictional world and his myth, the fantastic elements and mythopoesis in Modernism only exists to illuminate the inner life of the characters and their personal revelations. The internal directions of his work and the work of Modernism are at odds.
Also, both the 19th century Realists and the 20th century Modernists practiced an attention to detail in the prose itself that Tolkien does not seem to value. Tolkien does not pursue the language of Realistic description nor the Modernist's addiction to density.
Call him a latter-day Romantic and you're on to something.
I'm a bit confused. No one but modernists ever wrote fiction with symbolic content? All modernists write nothing but symbols, and no one else used symbols at all? Is that it? If not, at what density of symbol use does the work pass from non-modernist to modernist? Are there published density tests?That's what modernists were all about: referring to other things, let them be other works, religious, cultural etc.
I'm a bit confused. No one but modernists ever wrote fiction with symbolic content? All modernists write nothing but symbols, and no one else used symbols at all? Is that it? If not, at what density of symbol use does the work pass from non-modernist to modernist? Are there published density tests?
OK, to paraphrase Gertrude Stein, a joke is a joke is a joke.
