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[Ramble] Sci Fi, Mankind, Evolution - Page 2

Blogs > Newbistic
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elt
Profile Joined July 2010
Thailand1092 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-08-18 07:03:45
August 18 2012 06:56 GMT
#21
On August 17 2012 10:12 Newbistic wrote:
Show nested quote +
On August 16 2012 13:47 Qwyn wrote:
On August 15 2012 21:31 Newbistic wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +
In general, nerds tend gravitate towards two main genres of fiction, fantasy and science fiction. I hate fantasy and I love science fiction.

Fantasy for me represents a sort of romanticizing of the past, glossing over all the terrible things such as poverty, disease, and lack of sanitation in favor of "oh look, how cool would it be if..." Fantasy brings to life all of the superstition of the past, from alchemy to straight-up magic. But none of it can ever happen.




That annoys me to no end. NO END.

I am a fantasy writer on my way to getting published. I read both fantasy and science fiction.

Yes, fantasy does contain some of the tropes you talk about. There is a lot of romanticizing the past, because that is what fantasy uses as the means to tell a story. However, fantasy as a genre will ALWAYS be more fluid, open-ended, and allow for more possibilities than SF. And it is the amount of possibilities which gives the genre the most opportunity for exploration.

I do have to say that "glossing over all the terrible things such as poverty, disease, and lack of sanitation" reeks of ignorance. A couple points.

1. Fantasy (most modern fantasy) has fallen further and further away from medieval tropes/backgrounds. What we are seeing in modern development of the genre is the creation of more and more world/systems that are extremely intricate and refined. Once again - amazing depth of possiblity.

2. "Glossing over terrible things." This is independent of genre. It is a major style choice of writing to focus on positive things and neglect certain more depressing/realistic elements. Happy or sad book, no? It helps a lot with catharsis if we don't have the whole arc be depressing. However, as I said - it is a style choice.

There is no reason why lack of sanitation/depression/war/disease/genocide/corruption/poverty/murder/torture/chaos/war cannot happen in a fantasy setting. It does, in fact, happen in many novels. There are some writers who create a serious setting, and some that prefer not to dwell on some issues. I have written books, read books dealing with these issues. They are most definitely considered.

What I find that many people seem to disregard the elements most crucial to storytelling, most especially in the SF genre.

I have read so many terrible books by SF authors who come up with some idea that they think is wonderful but do not have the skills in fiction to execute it. NO IDEA in genre writing takes precedence over one's ability to write a well written story.

If you want that sort of shit, go read hard SF. Most of it isn't even a story, just exploration of future tech/ideas (OBVIOUSLY there are exceptions to this). Read it too, boring as W&P. But hey, if that's your thing, go ahead! Just remember that in the SF genre almost everything has been done to death, so it comes down to your fundamentals as a writer and not so much the idea.

But in terms of ideas - fantasy is wide open. A good fantasy writer leaves nothing to chance. Systems are carefully mapped. Magic is merely Earth's current ruleset redefined. Everything within said system is affected by alterations to the ruleset. But it all comes down to fundamentals. A good writer can take a horrible, overused idea and create a book worth reading. Wonderful ideas executed by terrible writers are not worth the read. They can be forgotten, or called a literary masterpiece. But they're definitely not worth my time (or yours).

And that, is independent of genre. Good books are timeless. Good books have plots, characters, and worlds worth remembering. Happy reading!


I'm not trying to say that fantasy objectively sucks, just why I don't like it. I guess the more accurate way to describe it is that (good) science fiction can be more easily related to the current world than fantasy. Fantasy is always (I think, unless you know differently) set in the past, not even necessarily of Earth's past, so there isn't any real point in trying to trace it forward in time to present day. Science fiction is more philosophically driven than fantasy, which allows it to be analyzed in terms of mankind's eventual development from its current state.

What would you personally recommend as some good fantasy books or series? Something that isn't A Song of Ice and Fire, which unfortunately for me falls into the "wonderful ideas executed by terrible writers" group.


I think science-fiction drives (partly) our vision for the future, what we as people wish to see, wish to avoid and wish to become. A lot of sci-fi (that I've read anyway) derives its plots and motivations from current events and issues (at the time), so going back and forth is a no brainer.

Until recently I personally didn't read much sci-fi, and the majority of my leisure reading was fantasy and I didn't see much attraction in sci-fi. This is my own experience, but I think I needed a certain level of cynicism with regards to the world and maturity to begin to enjoy sci-fi. I started with Old Man's War and then moved way back to read Foundation. I think I share some of your sentiment in regards to the stars, but I am somewhat resigned to the fact that I probably won't be around to see us reach them, if we ever do.

I think you're trying to get too much out of fantasy, especially extrapolating it to compare it to the current day. Unless you read Pratchett, who is a category unto himself. I'll admit that part of my enjoyment that I derive from reading fantasy is the escapism, and enjoying a story for its own sake. If that doesn't float your boat then, well, everyone is different.

To answer your question about fantasy set in Earth's past/future I'd point at The Book of the New Sun, though it does not resemble Earth in the slightest and is a fantasy off-shoot from the Dying Earth branch.

For fantasy I'd personally recommend my favourite living author Guy Gavriel Kay, Tigana, The Lions of al-Rassan, The Sarantine Mosaic and so on. They're historical fantasy (in a sense), and probably not his most famous work (that's often cited as the Fionavar Tapestry which is very much a throwback to Tolkien, but I think Under Heaven has a claim now). I admit that he probably isn't suited to everyone's tastes though.

EDIT:
I just remembered an interesting response to a question by Ian Tregillis on his treatment (or lack thereof) of the Holocaust.
+ Show Spoiler +
- In my review, I wrote: “The only aspect of this novel which sort of kept nagging at me was the total absence of the pogroms and the entire Jewish angle of WWII. Considering just how important what came to be known as the Holocaust was and still echoes down the decades since the end of the war, it felt odd -- to say the least -- not to see a single mention of this atrocious genocide.”

Would you care to elaborate on this? I’m probably not the only reader who noticed that there is no mention of the Holocaust. . .


You know, there are some readers who felt that not writing directly about the Holocaust was one of the few things I did right, given my ham-handed treatment of history. I tell ya, a guy just can't win.

Just because something isn't mentioned by name doesn't mean it isn't there. (And, honestly, would you really want to read a book that attempted to exorcise the curse of its WWII setting merely by mentioning "Final Solution" a couple of times? Because I'm not convinced that merely mentioning an atrocity absolves the story of its responsibility to acknowledge and understand its context. The state-sanctioned murder of 6 million people isn't something you merely name-check.)

I thought very long and very hard about how to approach these books before I started. This isn't a project I undertook lightly.

BITTER SEEDS is achingly aware of the Holocaust, and I'm a little surprised by the suggestion that it isn't. Von Westarp carries out grisly human experimentation (which amounts, the vast majority of the time, to murder) in the service of what he believes is a higher ideal. His efforts eventually become institutionalized and formalized by the Third Reich. That horrific backdrop to the story is meant to echo the Holocaust. Later, when von Westarp is preparing for a massive expansion of his research program, the means he devises for mass disposal of bodies are specifically meant to echo some of the real-world atrocities that took place in the concentration camps. (And it's no accident that von Westarp's fictional farm is situated fairly close to the real-world site of Buchenwald. I specifically included a scene where the ubermenschen practice their abilities on prisoners from the camps. When VW's children need people upon whom to practice their powers, the SS sends over a truckload of prisoners, including Jews, from the camps.) There's also a scene where one of the major secondary characters is cremated, and his ashes rise up into the sky, then come back down mixed with snow. That was intended as a deliberate nod to a particularly chilling visual in Schindler's List. (I'm not comparing BITTER SEEDS to that film in any way, shape or form. But it's a film I respect quite a bit.)

These things are there, and they're there for a reason. They're my way of acknowledging that the story would never have been possible outside an environment where a horror like the Holocaust was taking place.

Readers may disagree with my choice to approach the subject discreetly, and that's absolutely their prerogative. But just because something is addressed obliquely doesn't mean it's being dismissed, or approached with a cavalier attitude. I made the choices I did because it became clear while thinking about how to approach this book -- and, in fact, the very question you raise about the Holocaust -- that there's a fine line beyond which devoting scenes to an exploration of the Nazi genocide would have meant devoting the entire *story* to that subject. Otherwise, it would have read like Hogan's Heroes. (Think on that, and shudder in revulsion as I do.)

Over at Making Light recently, Debra Doyle wrote about some of the pitfalls of writing alternate history. One of her points is so germane to this discussion, and her take on it so perfectly right, that I'm going to quote her (the full text of her post is here). In her case she was talking about the American Civil War. She said, in part:

"Concentrating on any one aspect of it, within the confines of a novel, is inevitably going to mean not dealing with any number of other aspects, and at that point you’re a fit victim for the 'there is no mention of Z in this book' line of criticism. For which the only honest answer a writer can give is, 'A book about Z would have been a different book, and the book that I wanted to write was this one.'"

And she's right.

Earlier, I said that the Milkweed books were my attempt to tell myself an entertaining adventure story. So, just as a thought experiment, let's recast this discussion in terms of films rather than books for a moment: Nobody ever criticizes "The Guns of Navarone" for not being "Schindler's List". Why, then, are books different? "Navarone" (not my favorite film, but a suitable example for this discussion, and in fact based on a book by Alistair MacLean) is a WWII action/adventure movie about a completely fictitious commando mission in the Greek Isles. The Nazi genocide doesn't play a direct role in the film. Is that a failing? If so, how should it have been incorporated into the story?

Well, I think it becomes pretty obvious that directly incorporating the Holocaust into "The Guns of Navarone" would be a completely different movie. Not a bad movie, per se, but a different one. Different from what the filmmakers wanted to pursue. Which again is neither good nor bad, but a simple fact.

And, frankly, I don't think an action/adventure movie (book) is necessarily a good venue for serious, respectful contemplation of the horrors of the Final Solution. (Again, the worst-case scenario would be something akin to "Hogan's Heroes". Which, if you can't tell, was a TV show I really hated.) I suppose one could argue that perhaps this suggests that any action/adventure stories set during WWII are inherently flawed because they're not a commentary on the Holocaust. It's not for me to say one way or the other, but that argument does strike me as tarring things with an awfully wide brush.

Alternatively, then, maybe the argument is that WWII stories that don't directly address the Final Solution should be avoided. But I still think that's deeply flawed reasoning. For instance, if BITTER SEEDS had been a book about the Pacific theater, or about the Japanese occupation of Manchuria, or about the Burma Road, or about a naval battle off the coast of Argentina, would it have been odd to omit a discussion of the concentration camps in Europe? Of course not. So where do we draw the line between compulsory inclusion and egregious name-checking? The Second World War is an enormous subject. No one story can cover it all. History books that attempt to cover the entire war are thick beasts.

Now, just to be 100% clear, I'm not saying there's no need for stories about the Holocaust, whether fiction or nonfiction. Because there is, and there always will be. I feel very strongly that any story -- book, film, stage play, whatever -- that *does* touch on the horrors of the Holocaust should do it honestly, unflichingly, and respectfully. But not every story is the proper framework for that.

full interview: http://fantasyhotlist.blogspot.com.au/2010/08/interview-with-ian-tregillis.html
(Under Construction)
JabiruPugna
Profile Joined August 2012
2 Posts
August 18 2012 14:08 GMT
#22
Fantasy is often an allegory or metaphorical journey that is absolutely relevant to modern day and modern life. If you approach it in the most literal sense of course you will feel it doesn't address any meaningful issues. If you read fantasy with an eye towards parallels, dynamics, philosophies, and morals, I guarantee you will find that it has a great deal of relevance.

Whether it's today's world, the future world, or the ancient world, the game of politics, war, greed, everything about humanity pretty much, can be expressed.
YoucriedWolf
Profile Joined July 2010
Sweden1456 Posts
August 19 2012 08:48 GMT
#23
Personally I think we will inevitably colonize other planets no matter how badly we choose to persue this venture (and we are doing a pretty bad job). It is just to close to our grasp.
Setev
Profile Blog Joined April 2010
Malaysia390 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-08-19 20:25:55
August 19 2012 20:21 GMT
#24
Personally I think we will inevitably colonize other planets no matter how badly we choose to persue this venture (and we are doing a pretty bad job). It is just to close to our grasp.


Yeah. Survival instincts of humanity cannot be overlooked. If push comes to shove, and the world is really overpopulated (or close to), there will be no doubt that terraforming of neary planets/planetoids will occur.

Even if the decision makers have defeatist attitudes and are incredibly short sighted when it comes to space travel, it still won't stop humanity from colonizing space in the long run. Think, with all the competition in the world between superpowers, will any superpower be willing to let the other one stake a claim on another planet? If 100 years later, China landed the first man on Mars or Europa, and the USA is still without a manned space vehicle, what do you think will happen to the incumbent President of that time?

Anyway, what I am trying to say is that competiton eliminates the weak and forces the strong to step up. If the USA is not willing or unable to pursue space travel seriously, it will fall behind to more interested and motivated parties. At that point, who needs the USA?

While interstellar travel might not be possible in my lifetime, it will be for future generations (see my argument above). That makes it even more important for me to contribute to space travel right now, knowing my efforts will one day help humanity to expand and obtain incredible knowldege.

I'm the King Of Nerds
ArcticRaven
Profile Joined August 2011
France1406 Posts
August 19 2012 23:41 GMT
#25
I'd like to agree with Setev as strongly as i can - most of space exploration was driven by the cold war and the USA URSS space race. If we see another such opposition, odds are strong space is going to be one of the areas of competition.

Also I'd like to recommend low-magic fantasy such as Robin Hobb's Royal Assassin or Glen Cook's The Black Company. The former is a simple tale without much ambition that ends well, written in simple style ; i feel it contrasts very positively against A Song of Fire and Ice (which I'm reading right now) or The Malazan Book of the Fallen in that the writer didn't try to write something epic and bigger than life, but just a good story with deep distinctive characters in a realistic, not-driven-by-magic world. I know quite a few people that found it naive or boring because of that simplicity, but it's a good counterpart to sometimes too epic to be serious books. (Malazan still holds a major place in my heart thou :D) The latter has a bit of the same simplicity : no one tries to save the world, no one is a caricature or an archetype - people just try to survive. I find it has a great outlook on human nature in general and other fantasy books in particular - if you read any manichean book afterwards it'll feel like propaganda. It's sober, efficient, fun, and it's easy to relate to the actual world. Both these books see only human people come into play, and magic isn't the focus of the story.

And of course, try to read Malazan. It's pompous, full of archetypal characters, deus ex machina driven and every magic is everywhere, but if you can bear that, it's bigger than life, more epic than Dune and Fondation at the same time, and has that ability to make you forget about everything else. It's mildly philosophical and I feel it has helped me build myself - i wouldn't be the same person if i had not read it.

Wow, this post has become way bigger than what i had intended Oo. I fear it might push your blog further into a fantasy appreciation thread, but well. That's what happens when peole talk about what they are passionate about
[Govie] Wierd shit, on a 6 game AP winning streak with KOTL in the trench. I searched gandalf quotes and spammed them all game long, trenchwarfare247, whateva it takes!
Newbistic
Profile Blog Joined August 2006
China2912 Posts
August 20 2012 08:48 GMT
#26
On August 20 2012 05:21 Setev wrote:
Show nested quote +
Personally I think we will inevitably colonize other planets no matter how badly we choose to persue this venture (and we are doing a pretty bad job). It is just to close to our grasp.


Yeah. Survival instincts of humanity cannot be overlooked. If push comes to shove, and the world is really overpopulated (or close to), there will be no doubt that terraforming of neary planets/planetoids will occur.

Even if the decision makers have defeatist attitudes and are incredibly short sighted when it comes to space travel, it still won't stop humanity from colonizing space in the long run. Think, with all the competition in the world between superpowers, will any superpower be willing to let the other one stake a claim on another planet? If 100 years later, China landed the first man on Mars or Europa, and the USA is still without a manned space vehicle, what do you think will happen to the incumbent President of that time?

Anyway, what I am trying to say is that competiton eliminates the weak and forces the strong to step up. If the USA is not willing or unable to pursue space travel seriously, it will fall behind to more interested and motivated parties. At that point, who needs the USA?

While interstellar travel might not be possible in my lifetime, it will be for future generations (see my argument above). That makes it even more important for me to contribute to space travel right now, knowing my efforts will one day help humanity to expand and obtain incredible knowldege.



That's an interesting point you make. But whereas you see competition and survival as proof of inevitability that humanity will become space-borne, I argue that this may not be the case.

In a highly competitive environment (be it nature, modern society, or a future society where resources run short and living is difficult), what is the goal of survival? It is to ensure that you stay alive while others may be dying. What is the goal of competition? To ensure that you are stronger than others who are striving for the same goal.

But to reach these goals, one only needs to be a little bit ahead of someone else. The easiest way for a nation to survive and beat the competition is to make sure that their landmass is larger than other nations', their armies more powerful, their populations larger, their production faster. In other words, for the United States to be more powerful than China, they do not need to to aim for long-term goals such as space colonization. They can simply pool resources into making a more powerful army. If China is wasting resources on interstellar travel and the United States is busy building an army, the US can easily defeat China in battle. China, upon seeing the United States building its army, will realize that in order to survive, it will have to compete with the US directly in terms of military power. Thus both nations research technologies that may not be useful for space exploration and leech the resources of the planet through their international trade. If war ever comes, it may cause so much destruction and waste of resources that humanity does not have enough to recover.

This can also be put in terms of a StarCraft analogy. Two players are on a map, competing for survival. One player can decide that the best way to survive is to tech up to powerful units, such as battle cruisers or motherships and colossi. The other player decides to allocate his resources into a two base all-in. When the first player scouts the second player's build, he is most likely going to cancel his tech and divert all his resources to producing units to defend the all-in. Thus both players build up until they are nearly mined out, and when they fight they base trade to the point that neither has the infrastructure to continue to grow and expand.

What I'm basically saying is that humanity's survival instincts oftentimes do not go past the survival of their own selves or their children. A nation's survival instinct does not go past the survival of itself. A far-reaching goal such as space exploration may never become realized as a viable way to compete for survival.
Logic is Overrated
alfyma
Profile Joined October 2010
United Kingdom78 Posts
August 21 2012 12:48 GMT
#27
I think that there probably needs to be some stimulus or incentive for the colonization of space. There are certain asteroids made of solid rare metals, certain moons with water that we may require if our population goes above a certain level, and I suppose that it is possible that we may decide its worth attempting to put colonies on mars, or in orbit. Incidentally, terraforming mars is not as easy as most sci-fi authors who deal with this topic pretend - since mars has a very weak magnetic field, the solar wind quickly strips away any atmosphere (it appears that it *used* to have a strong magnetic field like the earth, but we don't know what happened... although we may know soon http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/InSight ).

So I see colonization of space as occuring for mainly economic reasons more than anything else, and I think its unlikely that we would just start as a "spirit for adventure"... in the same way as the colonization of the new world didn't start that way, and was mainly driven by economic factors. I think it is therefore unlikely that we will ever colonize other Earth-like planets in any serious way, as there are no suitable planets in our solar system, and no-one would fund a project that would take hundreds if not thousands of years to turn a profit (colonizing a different solar system). By "profit" I don't necessarily just mean the narrow capitalist definition, it would take a similar length of time to turn a "social" profit as well.

This could change if humanity changes, but I would say that if we were to become able and willing to plan on thousand year timescales, then we would probably no longer be recognizably human. And I don't see how that change would occur.

Of course, the thousand year timescale could be shortened dramatically by some sort of FTL technology, but I'm rather sceptical that that would be possible at the energies that we have available in our solar system (i.e. we don't have the power available to make it possible to transport enough matter).
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