sraun: portrait (Default)
sraun ([personal profile] sraun) wrote2007-05-13 08:25 pm
Entry tags:

A thought about SF&F and Academe

There was a panel at Minicon some years ago - IIRC, the title was
something like "Science Fiction and Fantasy: Instantiating the
Metaphor". Someone (maybe one of the panelists?) raised an interesting
point - a number of things that are exclusively metaphorical in
mainstream fiction can easily be literal truths in SF&F. (For example,
my wife described a character as a silk-dressed cobra - the first
question asked about the passage was 'is she a snake or a human?')

Since there is that problem, the metaphors, similes, and similar
constructs in SF&F are either absent, or much larger or more
subtle. From what I can tell, this drives the academic nuts - part of
their world-view is that they provide the explanation of what the
author was saying by pointing out all these constructs, and explaining
what they mean. And in SF&F it's (mostly) just not there! The
whole story (or big blocks of it) may have meaning or illumination
outside the story proper, but it's not there at the nit-picky detail
level that academics love.

[identity profile] adina-atl.livejournal.com 2007-05-14 07:52 pm (UTC)(link)
You're missing the point, I'm afraid. Marriage as the final act isn't a "characteristic flaw" of anything, it's just plain a characteristic of at least 99% of the non-tragic fiction written in the last four thousand years, including most of what is considered "classic literature." I used it as an example of a theme or message that can be found if you look for it (or not found, as the case may be), not as a flaw to pick at.

I probably shouldn't have used the phrase "critical eye" in my original comment--blame the time of night I posted it. I meant an analytical eye, not a fault-finding one. Pity "critic" has picked up such a negative meaning.

[identity profile] dd-b.livejournal.com 2007-05-14 09:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Looks to me like you're not reading the same books I'm reading. Marriage as any kind of finale is rare in SF, rare in mystery, moderately rare in historical and spy fiction. I believe it's common in...romance. Strangely enough. :-) But nowhere else.