Literary Fiction

Hereford Eye

Just Another Philistine
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In the thread about Ray Bradbury's impact on subsequent fiction, a discussion arose concerning literary fiction. Today, I came across this infographic which separates work into popular versus literary. Check out the members of each group and attempt to decipher what the sorting criteria might be.
 
That is the silliest thing I've ever seen. What is of course very funny is that all the literary fiction books listed are bestsellers to massive bestsellers -- they are popular. And some of them aren't considered literary fiction by very many people -- The Help for instance. There's no actual criteria involved in their little graph.
 
I have spent a ridiculous amount of time (at least 90 seconds) attempting to create a truly humorous while profound explanation of the criteria involved. I have insufficient talent for that exercise. However, it seems to me the architects of that graph suffer the same lack of understanding we experienced in the Bradbury thread.
It seems as if literary pretends to mean...well, consider that Chaucer, Shakespeare, Khafka, Balzac, Hugo, Tolstoy, folk like that are literary authors. They're all not North American and they're all dead. The only non-North American authors I recognize in the Popular list are Larson (he's dead) and See (she's not) but look at the number in the Literary. So, maybe if you're not North American and can string a few sentences together in a cohesive fashion, even if you're not dead you can still be literary.
 
I like this one better.....it moves. :D
That's really good and eerily accurate!
I'm not impressed. Tolkien gives me Ann Rice and J.K Rowling as closest. Huh? I'm not a fan of either.
Elizabeth Moon gives me Lois Mcmaster Bujold and Glen Cook and neither of those has produced anything close to The Deed of Paksenarion. Oh, yeah, I'm not a fan of either.
But, I do agree they are all SFF.:)
 
All the fiction in the original graphic are bestsellers. Room, The Lovely Bones, The Historian, The Memory Keeper's Daughter, Snow Flower and Secret Fan, and The Time Traveler's Wife have all been sold as and general considered to be literary fiction.

The Help, Fall of Giants, Ready Player One, A Discovery of Witches, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, The Name of the Wind and Matched were not marketed as or generally considered to be literary fiction. George's Song is a matter of debate, and Name of the Wind may eventually be viewed more widely as such. Some could make a case for Fall of Giants.

But overall, it's a quite weird graphic listing.
 
It gets even better. Here is what Amazon lists as Literature and Fiction. I suppose the hedge their bets with the "...and Fiction" but then it wasn't necessary as any published work would fall under a Literature Category. It's the intent that tickles me. These are works of Literature with a capital L. I suppose there is a categorical difference between Literature and Literary as Luminarium lists Isaac Newton's Principia as fitting in Literature.
 
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Hi. I'm not sure how useful you'll find this definition, but I understand literary fiction to be fiction that falls into the modernist or postmodernist genre, is primarily realistic or naturalistic, and emphasizes style, theme, and characterization at the expense of plot. I'm probably wrong, of course, especially since this definition doesn't allow for magical realism.
 
Here is how see it...today. For explanation, I view contemporary as all novels not covered elsewhere. I name it contemporary because such novels address the world the author lives(ed) in at the moment of writing.

Oops! In my current version I move alternate histories over to the fantasy side of the house.
 
In retail trade, as has come up in other places, literary fiction is a marketing designation, meaning that they feel the writer excels in language use, imagery use, skill of style, depth of theme, and seriousness of subject matter. It is used on fiction usually published first in hardcover or trade paperback on the print side. It doesn't have to be modernist or post-modern or realist, although historical fiction is a favorite for this designation. Having an author who is a university professor in literature or creative writing helps when using the marketing designation but is not required. It's used on books sold throughout the general market and sometimes in the additional category "genre" markets. Once the publisher puts it out in the market, professional reviewers subjectively assess whether they agree with the publisher that the particular book has skilled language use, imagery and style, depth of theme and seriousness of subject matter. If there are any profiles or articles about the author and work in addition to reviews, they will also subjectively assess how accurate they feel is the designation or report what others considered knowledgeable have said about the work, including what reviewers have said.

Academia is largely not involved in this process; it's a media thing. However, literature academics who are also reviewers or commenting about types of fiction may offer quotes in articles that praise the work as literary -- skilled in writing, etc. -- and that may carry weight in the general public/media. If universities and high school also start using the work in their curriculum, this may also add to the reputation of those works as literary in the marketplace, although often the marketplace is not aware that this is going on until considerably down the road, often when the publishers reissue the works.

There are a handful of major book awards in each country. Some of them get international and media attention, in part because those awards have worked to get it from a PR standpoint and also with some help from Las Vegas bookies offering odds on winners of some awards in the 1980's and 1990's onward. Publishers decide what books they are going to put up for the award committee to take a gander at and sometimes have to pay to submit the book. For that reason, the large publishers very seldom put up titles that have been published by publishing imprints seen as genre category (and thus as primarily mass market paperback or high action lines,) or anything that started as mass market paperback, because it simply doesn't have as good a shot due to publishing culture which is still half-stuck in the 1960's. While things are slowly changing in that area, that's pretty much still how it works. If the author is also a screenwriter, this may also contribute to the author being seen as literary, unless the author does comedy films, in which case, maybe not.

If they do want an author who has worked with category publishers to have an award nomination possibility for a next work, they will usually move the author's new work and sometimes reissues of older work to a general fiction imprint, while still cross-marketing to the genre category market. This is particularly likely to happen if the author writes in several areas of fiction, including some novels published in general fiction. In the SFF category market, the author may or may not continue to be seen as a category author, depending on how involved the author is in conventions and category events and category market media.

If a novel or collection is shortlisted for one of the big "lit" awards, then it is generally considered in the marketplace that the literary designation is accepted. However, there will also be millions of people who believe the work should have been nowhere near the award and is not literary at all. Books that are long-listed for the awards -- put up by publishers, made the first rounds of cuts but not the short list -- are generally allowed by media and fans to further push that they are therefore literary or kind of literary. Academia may teach lit award winning books, but they won't necessarily.

If an author publishes short fiction in publications that the general media of the country the publication is based in considers to be a literary publication -- The New Yorker, etc. -- then in general, even if an author is published in category imprints or works in comic books or things of that nature, they will usually get acceptance of the literary marketing designation for their longer books or collections. The number of widely known magazine publications that publish fiction has declined in the last two and a half decades in the English language market due to the wholesale market collapse and the magazine collapse/rejection of fiction that started in the 1980's. But it's still a prime way to get general media to call an author's work literary, opening up venues for reviews and publicity.
 
Leave it to me to wander back to good ol' SFFWorld and stumble into another thread like this :cool:

In retail trade, as has come up in other places, literary fiction is a marketing designation, meaning that they feel the writer excels in language use, imagery use, skill of style, depth of theme, and seriousness of subject matter.

True enough. If we are assessing the underlying logic of the graphic, then the inquiry would focus on where that "feeling" came from, or why that matters to the designation.

professional reviewers subjectively assess whether they agree with the publisher that the particular book has...

In fear of opening this particular battle again... it's not purely subjective. Any professional with an ounce of credibility -- or indeed, a high school education obtained within the past hundred years -- has been well trained in formalist analysis, which seeks to understand the text as an object comprised of devices that are objectively identifiable. The assessment of their "merit" is both a question of applying an analytical methodology to those objectively verifiable devices, and one of subjective "reaction."

Like it or not, there is typically a normalized trend in such criticism and review, and aggregate review websites have been excellent statistical tools in that sense to demonstrate how these "subjective" reactions tend to share perspectives (despite the outliers).

Academia is largely not involved in this process; it's a media thing.

Except for the pesky origin of the concept of "literary," which everyone was taught in high school.

However, literature academics who are also reviewers or commenting about types of fiction may offer quotes in articles that praise the work as literary -- skilled in writing, etc. -- and that may carry weight in the general public/media. If universities and high school also start using the work in their curriculum, this may also add to the reputation of those works as literary in the marketplace, although often the marketplace is not aware that this is going on until considerably down the road, often when the publishers reissue the works.

So, the marketing is relying on an existing sense of what is and is not literary, which is taught to the audience in their mandatory education years, and then the market might adjust that category based on whether or not a book gets picked up by those who educate the consumer in their mandatory education years. But, you know... academia has not much to do with it ;)

If an author publishes short fiction in publications that the general media of the country the publication is based in considers to be a literary publication -- The New Yorker, etc. -- then in general, even if an author is published in category imprints or works in comic books or things of that nature, they will usually get acceptance of the literary marketing designation for their longer books or collections.

It's pretty hard to get published in the New Yorker if your piece doesn't already fit the definition of literary as you offered above. Hence the importance of the professional publishing world in acting as gate-keeper, versus the self-pub model. And most in publishing can probably be classed as bibliophiles with high levels of academic education in literature, wherein the probably acquired the sense of what "literary" means! :p

--

Per the OP, while I find some of the presented titles for the graphic surprising choices, I can see that in general the "literary" basket contains mostly works that are quite clearly produced by well-read expert writers who are focused on craft and quite aware of how they are using or defying genre conventions. The authors represented, by and large, are trying to do their own thing in an evidently self-conscious way.

Though this is not at all how I mean it, I will say it in a flippant, generalized, elitist kind of way: Literary authors know their influences and know how to use them; non-literary authors don't even know they are using their influences. :eek:
 
In fear of opening this particular battle again...
As much as I try to ignore your battles, you two (Fung and KatG) never fail to entertain. Nice to have you back, even you do poke sticks in a fire! :)

Literary authors know their influences and know how to use them; non-literary authors don't even know they are using their influences.

That's probably pretty accurate.
 
Though this is not at all how I mean it, I will say it in a flippant, generalized, elitist kind of way: Literary authors know their influences and know how to use them; non-literary authors don't even know they are using their influences. :eek:

Yes, an argument often used by elitists, and often in a flippant, generalized and condescending manner which ignores all the 'non-literary' authors of popular fiction who are very much aware of their influences and draw on them expertly.

Literary writing, like non-literary writing, is a choice made by the writer. And, more importantly, the reader.
 
Leave it to me to wander back to good ol' SFFWorld and stumble into another thread like this :cool:

Hello you!

True enough. If we are assessing the underlying logic of the graphic, then the inquiry would focus on where that "feeling" came from, or why that matters to the designation.

It's not really a logic. They like and admire the writing. There are implicit biases in their assessments that come from different experiences and preferences, as well as other subjective assessment. (Which is how we ended up with a lot of white guys writing about white college professors who sleep with their students and the frequent preference that historical stories are more serious.) Publishing people are not academics indulging in critical theory. And the range of what they push as literary is, as you know, quite broad, and thankfully getting broader. The marketing people are often the ones making the designation and the reasons for it are not always due to the content or style of the book itself, although in general they relate to them feeling that the writing is strong and the material deep, both subjectively determined.

In fear of opening this particular battle again... it's not purely subjective. Any professional with an ounce of credibility -- or indeed, a high school education obtained within the past hundred years -- has been well trained in formalist analysis, which seeks to understand the text as an object comprised of devices that are objectively identifiable. The assessment of their "merit" is both a question of applying an analytical methodology to those objectively verifiable devices, and one of subjective "reaction."

Well you know, it's funny, but I had a high school education at a good school and a fancy English lit major university education and worked in publishing in several different jobs and remarkably no, formalist analysis was not going on. More to the point, devices in a text do not by sheer existence form an objective framework of quality, although there are theories that argue this idea. But we do not have either objective fact nor consensus on what is good high quality imagery and poor quality imagery, what is poetic and not poetic, etc., and we certainly don't have them in the retail book market. Again, you tend to have an exalted view of book editors as ivy tower professionals. The "shared objective qualities" idea is one you often float Fung, you just don't make very convincing arguments for it against practical realities. Literary is a perception of value and perceptions are subjective.

Like it or not, there is typically a normalized trend in such criticism and review, and aggregate review websites have been excellent statistical tools in that sense to demonstrate how these "subjective" reactions tend to share perspectives (despite the outliers).

No, there really isn't a normalized trend in book reviews. There are screaming rows in book reviews and a lot of bias problems in book reviews. Book reviewers aren't running to academics to make sure the books are following one literature theory or another, and they are quite often easily swayed by packaging. Also, books aren't movies. There are a few websites attempting to be the Rotten Tomatoes of books but no one's paying much attention to them, nor are people gathering data from them for statistics. (And I always love the "outliers" don't count arguments as you know.) Especially as the number of media doing book reviews (not counting the general Internet,) has been rapidly decreasing for the past twenty-five years and covers very little of any part of the market.

Except for the pesky origin of the concept of "literary," which everyone was taught in high school.

Technically, the term literary existed before the universities, but I have no problem with the notion of literary as a word being related to academia. But as we've discussed before -- and you've agreed with before -- literary used in the retail book market to present current titles as literary, and the whole literary versus genre issue about that market has to do with media and booksellers and publishers -- not universities. Universities do not run the publishing industry or book reviews in the New York Times or the Guardian. They don't sit around deciding whether the current month's book releases are academically literary or not. Publishers don't call academics and ask if they can call a book literary or not in going to the retail market with it. They do sometimes serve on award juries, and can influence people's perceptions in the general market in the ways I already mentioned. So they largely, as I said, aren't involved but are sometimes referenced, as I said.

In terms of literature -- the idea that a work is a classic work of art from the past or of interest studying academically in the present --- that is something that gets argued at universities for and against subjectively as part of the discussion of works. But that is not involved in the marketing of the works to and through booksellers and to the commercial media, and that's where the word "literary" gets bandied about for types of fiction. As you again have agreed before. :)

So, the marketing is relying on an existing sense of what is and is not literary, which is taught to the audience in their mandatory education years, and then the market might adjust that category based on whether or not a book gets picked up by those who educate the consumer in their mandatory education years. But, you know... academia has not much to do with it ;)

So you are saying that in high school, we all got taught the same set of objective quality assessments -- not simply about the concepts of themes, symbolism, characters and plot -- because all works have themes, symbolism, characters and plot -- but the correct quality assessment of doing the right, valuable theme, symbolism, characters and plot as opposed to non-valuable ones, and so we're all in agreement about exactly what those are and can then from that assessment, further assess the degree to which the author accomplished the correct, valuable theme, symbolism, characters and plot. Is that it? Because that's not how I experienced it in high school and certainly not university. You're trying to lay an under-lying framework for quality assessment of some sort, and I don't see it working and nor do many academics for that matter. We have a lot of academic discussions of value -- which are valuable -- but you're not going to turn artistic valuation into science, and it certainly isn't mass consensus.

It's pretty hard to get published in the New Yorker if your piece doesn't already fit the definition of literary as you offered above.

I didn't offer a definition of what was "literary" writing. I said publishers who think that a work is literary for them, that it has good writing, etc. for them -- subjective -- use the designation as part of their marketing of the work. And you're saying that they are all using the same framework to assess that writing as good for them. That is not something that I would claim or do claim because that's not what happens.

As for getting published in The New Yorker, whoever is running The New Yorker at the time has their subjective assessment of what is good writing for them. (And there are inherent issues in that, in terms of cultural issues, as you know, and also reacting to changes in that cultural milieu.) People also have a subjective assessment of The New Yorker as a purveyor of intellectual quality. Other equally learned people think The New Yorker is a stagnant purveyor of poor quality crap. But certainly, if you want to try and market a work that you think might appeal to the subjective tastes of the readers of The New Yorker, in terms of book reviews or pieces in the magazine about authors' work, especially the white middle class and upper class guys, then The New Yorker is very useful as a marketing device in hopes of then getting word of mouth in some areas. Its circulation has dropped, but it maintains a reputation to some people as being good assessors. And this reputation becomes self-circulating -- it was given the reputation -- subjectively -- and so some people see it as being good, which allows it to maintain the reputation, etc. The New Yorker is not the authority and definer of what is literary (cause there is none.) It is a publication that marketed itself as high quality for upper class readers, some of whom have subjectively agreed that it is such. This is not to knock The New Yorker; they often have interesting stuff for my views. And awful stuff for my views. Which is pretty much normal for people. And they have presented many writers to the world that many consider valuable and high quality, which has further supported their reputation to those who agree with it. And this is again a media-bookselling thing, rather than an academic thing. Universities are not looking to The New Yorker to tell them what to study.

Hence the importance of the professional publishing world in acting as gate-keeper, versus the self-pub model. And most in publishing can probably be classed as bibliophiles with high levels of academic education in literature, wherein the probably acquired the sense of what "literary" means! :p

Again, you have a very exalted view of publishing people as supplementary academics, which they are not. They are in general book lovers but they aren't think tanks of high levels of academic education in literature, even in editorial. They pick what they like and what they think will sell, which is a full subjective, very cultural, and subject to business factors at times endeavor. Publishers aren't gate-keepers of literary tradition or of the market, and things in the self-pub market are just as likely to be viewed by some people as literary as those that are put out by publishers. There is no one sense, no agreement of what books are literary and what are not. Literary is good writing -- what is good writing? One set of academics or people might say this is good writing, another group of academics or people might say that it is not. It's in that discussion of meaning, emotion and thought that we experience art, but it does not come to a conclusion -- it's an ongoing dialogue.

Per the OP, while I find some of the presented titles for the graphic surprising choices, I can see that in general the "literary" basket contains mostly works that are quite clearly produced by well-read expert writers who are focused on craft and quite aware of how they are using or defying genre conventions. The authors represented, by and large, are trying to do their own thing in an evidently self-conscious way.

The graph is a mess. The literary part does contain books that many people in the market have regarded as literary. So does the part that is labelled non-literary, and vice versa. In that sense, since it is all subjective, it's as fine to put out there for judgement as anyone else's graph. But what we've been talking about is that there is no clear indication of what set of (subjective) criteria the graph maker is using. As well as talking about how literary is used as a term in book publishing. (Which is not the same as academia, as again, you've agreed before.)

Though this is not at all how I mean it, I will say it in a flippant, generalized, elitist kind of way: Literary authors know their influences and know how to use them; non-literary authors don't even know they are using their influences. :eek:

Which is why Farrar, Straus & Giroux published the work of a guy who dropped out of school in the eighth grade, etc. :) I don't think it's going to work to say that only (mainly white, male) people with college and MFA degrees can write works that will universally be considered literary, first because no one is considered universally literary, and second because authors who don't have that background have written works that are considered literary by many, and many authors who do have that background have been rejected as literary by many. Plus you said we learned everything we need to know to be literary back in high school. :)

hscope said:
Yes, an argument often used by elitists,

Fung isn't really an elitist. He's an academic. He sees academics as studying and curating works of art and knowledge. And I don't disagree with that -- that's their job -- to study and to preserve, data for knowledge such as in the sciences and history and then works of art they find interesting and/or valuable and present them to others as material for consideration, including for historical purposes. It's a very valuable job. Where Fung and I differ is that we approach from two different schools of academic theory of literature. We differ on the notion of what curating means when it comes to the arts rather than scientific topics. I have the sort of hippie Unitarian view of arts and arts study while Fung has a more formal Catholic view. For him, the curators pick the best stuff, arguing about it and changing things along the way as needed, and present it as what people should see as the best stuff, which makes it half objectively the best stuff. For Fung, art is a rare, valuable quality because otherwise why is anything worth anything, and the job of scholars is to instruct, at least instruct in the basics of the proper way to do analysis of meaning.

For me, this is attempting to turn the arts into scientific data, which doesn't work because artistic worth, value -- quality and meaning -- are subjective and emotional, not universal. Curating is scholars looking at works of creative expression, looking at culture surrounding the creation of the works for study, finding what they feel is interesting, valuable, and why they feel it is so, and presenting the work (and their thoughts on it depending the circumstances,) to others as an experience, subjective to each person, an exploration and personal discovery in which people draw their own subjective assessments of meaning and value. In that shared discussion of our experiences, we find beauty, art, culture, values, etc., and much of the curating that scholars do is of that discussion rather than simply the creative works themselves, for historic purposes. For me, art is broad, expressive and subjective and that is an essential part of human experience and why we make, receive and share creative expression continually.

So because we have different views on approaches, we frequently debate this stuff -- and sometimes don't follow each other's line of argument well and talk past each other when we actually agree on various points -- and people either find this amusing and get popcorn or avoid it like the plague. :) You can also join in, as well, obviously.
 
The takeaway here is that it's a marketing designation enforced by gatekeepers.

There's something totalitarian about the notion of gatekeepers. Quality control presumes an objective measure of quality. Absent that, it's merely control.

The only objective measure of literary quality I'm aware of is spell check.
 
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