Duanawitch
Tea + Swords = Happiness
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2005
- Messages
- 82
Ok...Swordspoint. Absolutely no magic. No supernatural, psychic or unexplained events; there really is nothing about the structure of Kushner's world that is fantastic in nature. The novel is set in a city in an alternate world (there are some geographical referents that confirm this, but the city itself is unnamed and unpositioned in relation); the society itself, however, is reminiscent of an Italian city State in which noble families hire professional swordsmen to settle matters of honour. The story centres around the exceptionally gifted dualist Richard St. Vier, his enigmatic lover Alec and the fiendish politicking that dominates the lives of a vibrant cast of noblemen and women. Like its subtitle says it's a "Melodrama of Manners" with intelligence and agility featuring as the only unusual gifts and a very tight political scuffle as the plot. Nevertheless, it isn't our world or our historical world; there is some very distinct world-building flowing from reorientated gender and class relations.
If you were to stretch the word fantastic to its limits, you could possibily make the permissibility of homosexuality in Kushner's world a "fantastic" element. But I don't think the level of homosexual and bisexual activity is higher than in our own society; it's only the openness of their culture that allows its expression and exploration.
I absolutely agree on all the above points, except that fantasy *must* contain the obviously "fantastic": magic or the supernatural or that which has no basis in existence. I know that might seem ridiculous - root word and all - but the meaning of "Fantasy" in the OED is as simple as "an imagining unrestricted by reality; a creation of the imagination, especially a weird or bizarre one; an illusion, hallucination or phantom". And a publisher or bookseller would be hard-pressed to shelve/categorise something like Swordspoint, set in an alternate world as it is, anywhere else but in the Fantasy section. I agree that most Fantasy includes those things, but after reading Kushner's novel I think I'll have to stretch my conception of the genre once again (which is what I love about Fantasy: it is never stable, never still and I'm forever having to reorientate myself).
I've been trying to think of other examples, but my memory isn't ticking over: does GGK's A Song for Arbonne have any overtly fantastical elements? I remember that Lions of Al-Rassan has some psychic children in it and I suppose that is a fantastic skill, but it far from shapes or changes the reality of that world. Although Swordspoint might be a rather unusual example, its still pertinent.
On the question of SF I concede to your greater wisdom and experience; my idea of a definition wasn't all that well thought through.
However, on the point of Margaret Atwood and Philip Pullman...I don't think I expressed my concern very well. While I understand the demands of the industry, and how mainstream and genre publishing works, I'm continually shocked by genre fiction's bad reputation. (Not only SF/F but also Crime and Historical fiction...many so-called mainstream authors seem to view literary classifications as a matter of breeding and meaning, with genre fiction ranking far below). And often the prejudice, as with Atwood and Pullman, is born out of an ignorance that doesn't want to be corrected. Pullman has been quoted as saying he knows his work *isn't* fantasy, even though he claims to have never read any adult fantasy and wouldn't want to. He's said disdainingly of his fantasy author counterparts:
"They read my stuff but I don't bother with theirs. Its got no depth or meaning."
Equally, its obvious, as you say, that Atwood is totally uninformed. To me this isn't just a marketing issue but a vital misunderstanding and misconstruction of what SF/F has to offer. It all smacks of vanity and elitism. Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr...
SF/F may be beginning to creep onto syllabuses and cross-pollinate with the "literary fiction" sections, but it continues to be treated as a second class citizen.
If you were to stretch the word fantastic to its limits, you could possibily make the permissibility of homosexuality in Kushner's world a "fantastic" element. But I don't think the level of homosexual and bisexual activity is higher than in our own society; it's only the openness of their culture that allows its expression and exploration.
A fantasy story does not have to be about a quest and does not have to have a hero. It does not have to have cute animals, elves, dragons, wizards, dwarves or any other concept that may be commonly used in fantasy stories. It is a fantasy story because it is an imagined reality in which the fantastic occurs -- things that are caused by magic, the supernatural or who knows what -- things which do not exist in reality and which are given no scientific basis for existence. Fantasy stories can be set in any time and in any place, including imaginary worlds and the near or far future.
I absolutely agree on all the above points, except that fantasy *must* contain the obviously "fantastic": magic or the supernatural or that which has no basis in existence. I know that might seem ridiculous - root word and all - but the meaning of "Fantasy" in the OED is as simple as "an imagining unrestricted by reality; a creation of the imagination, especially a weird or bizarre one; an illusion, hallucination or phantom". And a publisher or bookseller would be hard-pressed to shelve/categorise something like Swordspoint, set in an alternate world as it is, anywhere else but in the Fantasy section. I agree that most Fantasy includes those things, but after reading Kushner's novel I think I'll have to stretch my conception of the genre once again (which is what I love about Fantasy: it is never stable, never still and I'm forever having to reorientate myself).
I've been trying to think of other examples, but my memory isn't ticking over: does GGK's A Song for Arbonne have any overtly fantastical elements? I remember that Lions of Al-Rassan has some psychic children in it and I suppose that is a fantastic skill, but it far from shapes or changes the reality of that world. Although Swordspoint might be a rather unusual example, its still pertinent.
On the question of SF I concede to your greater wisdom and experience; my idea of a definition wasn't all that well thought through.
However, on the point of Margaret Atwood and Philip Pullman...I don't think I expressed my concern very well. While I understand the demands of the industry, and how mainstream and genre publishing works, I'm continually shocked by genre fiction's bad reputation. (Not only SF/F but also Crime and Historical fiction...many so-called mainstream authors seem to view literary classifications as a matter of breeding and meaning, with genre fiction ranking far below). And often the prejudice, as with Atwood and Pullman, is born out of an ignorance that doesn't want to be corrected. Pullman has been quoted as saying he knows his work *isn't* fantasy, even though he claims to have never read any adult fantasy and wouldn't want to. He's said disdainingly of his fantasy author counterparts:
"They read my stuff but I don't bother with theirs. Its got no depth or meaning."
Equally, its obvious, as you say, that Atwood is totally uninformed. To me this isn't just a marketing issue but a vital misunderstanding and misconstruction of what SF/F has to offer. It all smacks of vanity and elitism. Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr...


