SiberianSamurai
Registered User
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2005
- Messages
- 74
Ok, first off, people in literary circles do hold fantasy in high esteem. There are numerous SFF writers being studied in university courses, having dissertations and masters thesis written about them, etc. Apparently, Ursula LeGuin is still the current queen, because she doubles in literature and women's studies. There are quite a few pundits as well, award winning authors, and the like who are strong advocates for fantasy fiction.
Of the people in literary circles who don't hold fantasy in high esteem, they don't really have a problem with fantasy fiction. Have Knopf bring it out and they're thrilled. They have a problem with category SFF, which they see as a different animal and a pop culture product. Category SFF is the stuff they figure must have spaceships and elves. The reasons they feel this way generally have nothing to do with what's in the books, but more image factors such as that SFFs published in mass market paperback chiefly, by specialty publishers, that it's sold in a special section of the bookstore, that there are SFF fan conventions, that category fantasy developed from category SF which developed from pulp magazines in the 1930's, SFF's long association with comics and gaming markets, that they think SFF readers are only young white males who live with their parents because they're told that's who reads the stuff -- that there is a category market: a large group of fans who don't gather just around one author whose work they like but will read a large group of authors doing a type of story they like.
To many self-proclaimed literati, this means that it's not the authors' writing that readers care about, but what the authors are writing about that's important. Which means that category SFF, QED, can't be literary, to their minds. This is also an attitude that some SFF fans have about deciding who in SFF is literary and who is not, unfortunately. Which leads many to say that we should dissolve the category market and solve the problem. However, it's too late -- doing that will not change the prejudices already in place. We can only go forward, encouraging people to take a closer look at history and open their minds.
When Tolkein wrote LOTR, a sequel to The Hobbit that morphed, there was no category fantasy market, just some authors doing fantasy in general fiction, like Tolkein, a bunch of writers doing children's fantasy fiction, and some SF authors doing fantasy as well as SF, horror and mystery fiction. So even though it was the category specialty publishers who put out the very successful paperback editions in the U.S., and even though LOTR's sales record is largely due to category SFF fans, he is not seen as a fantasy author -- a category author. He's seen as a fiction writer who, as he was also a scholar, certainly wasn't writing just for a bunch of D&D players, don't you know. No matter how much the SFF fans embrace Tolkein, we don't get to knock him up in our column, elves or no.
To many, non-fans or fans, the category authors are just ripping off Tolkein, copying him for a pop sensibility, and that includes Martin. It includes China Mievielle if it comes to that. It's not a fair assessment. It will change over time. Whether Martin or any other author, even Rowling, will have as big an image as Tolkein on the fantasy landscape is something we can't predict yet. It's worth remembering that on the overall fiction landscape, Tolkein's shadow is a lot smaller. In our genre world, however, Tolkein still clearly looms very large.
I agree that many fantasy elements can be found in mainstream literature, and that some of these examples are lauded as masterpieces of world fiction. But fantasy held in high esteem in literary circles? No, not so much.
It depends of course, as you've said, on what kind/category/genre/type (insert your favorite word here) of fantasy is being considered. On issues like this, I think speaking in generalities seems to help. Generally speaking, the number of people writing dissertations on fantasy fiction relative to other topics in the literary world is very low. Generally speaking, academic circles do hold there nose up to formulaic, genre/category (these terms are interchangeable, please do not act as if they are not) fiction. Generally speaking, literature classes in universities have nothing to do with fantasy or the speculative market.
In any case, I'll bet you're right- in all liklihood there are people writing dissertations on various fantasy works. But really, you can find people writing dissertations on all sorts of topics. I once knew of someone who wrote his whole dissertation on what constitutes a bottle. He asked all kinds of questions. Does a bottle have a specific shape. Does it have a specific function? In the end, he came to no definite conclusion. His argument was an epistemological one, which essentially stated that if humanity cannot agree on what constitutes a bottle, how will we ever agree on larger issues like race, religion, and politics? Anyway, you see my point. Just because some schmo is writing his dissertation on Leguin doesn't really change the fact that the fantasy fiction market is not looked highly upon in academia, nor is it ever likely to be.
And still I say that is one of the main aspects that makes Tolkien so great. He is able to get past all the upturned noses (to a degree) as well as appeal to the masses. He, in effect, transcends genre. Or if you prefer it said another way: his work eschews the traditional boundaries that frequently exist between genres. These two statements mean the same thing. They just mean that people who tend to gravitate toward genres which have nothing to do with fantasy can read him just as easily as genre fantasy readers. That is all it means. It is simple but it is rare when this phenemenon occurs.


