Kind of.Originally Posted by Duanawitch
I'm very interested by this idea of how fantasy works. Let me get this straight: "realistic" fiction is created by acts of language that are directly referential to objects, ideas and customs that we recognise in our "real" lives, while SF/F is created by exoticising the reference process and thereby subtly changing our approach to often familiar subjects or ideas?
Thus, although we are able to recognise a custom or a belief system (like, say, marriage) we are placed outside it, observing it through the imagination...and it becomes part of a non-reality, an otherworldly place? That has linguistic reflections, but is not speaking the language of "realism"? Hmmmm...I don't think I'm making any sense. Definitely much to think on though.
But sub-creation does more than make what is already known exotic. (That's the job of shmeerp.) I've done a poor job describing it. It is less about acts of language than about the inherent nature of language itself to screw with reality.
Here is a link to Tolkien's On Fairy Stories (hopefully legally on the net?)
There's one other distinction I've read about, and I'll mention it because Tolkien touches upon it a bit in the essay. Not sure how to describe this. Its kind of how each discourse relates to the culture of the readers. I'm not sure. Maybe you could call it thematic?
Sci-Fi: Progressive
Fantasy: Escapist (btw: LOVE Tolkien's take on this. Way to turn the materialists' arguments right back on them. Brilliant.)
Horror/Gothic: Subversive


