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East Gorteau22261 Posts
This blog was written in response to Jonathan Jones' article on the literary merit of Terry Pratchett and the validity his reputation as a literary giant.
Literary Fiction is a buzzword. Or at least, that is what it has become. Before I move beyond that opinion, let us look at the definition of the term:
Literary fiction is a term principally used for certain fictional works that hold literary merit. In other words, they are works that offer deliberate social commentary, political criticism, or focus on the individual to explore some part of the human condition. Literary fiction is deliberately written in dialogue with existing works created with the above aims in mind. Literary fiction is focused more on themes than on plot.
In a word, one could describe literary fiction as serious. In another, deep. On a fundamental level, literary fiction is regarded as the antithesis of pulp fiction, the polar opposite written for the value of entertainment alone. Literary fiction -- in the view of its most vocal supporters -- strives to be something much greater, a manner of entertainment accessible only to those who are willing to think, feel and contemplate.
At a glance, literary fiction is no different from any other fiction except for the target audience. As a general rule, literary fiction will never be as widely read as other brands of fiction because literary fiction is not written to be read as widely. It explores something else, whether that something is the deepest reaches of the human condition or the influence of prose on how a story can be told. Of itself, literary fiction is no enemy of popular or pulp fiction, it is merely a genre to itself.
Unfortunately, literary fiction garners the most zealous of readers. Frequent visitors of Reddit will recognize the snappy one-liner "r/iamverysmart", frequently posted in response to tirades aimed at the followers and fans of brands of fiction that to not subscribe to the banner of the literary. Unsurprisingly but nevertheless disappointingly, literary fiction appears to be the brand of fiction with the most enclosed and segregated readers. Presumptuous as it may be of me to say this, I have not encountered half the number of high-horsed and upstage enthusiasts of popular fiction (any genre) as I have of their contraries. I grant you that I do not peruse the literary to half the extent that I read Science Fiction or Fantasy (genres often viewed as being of lesser literary merit), but my preconceived notion of literary fiction's most vocal supporters tends to prove true.
It makes sense that Nobel Prize winners will attract the kind of people that are both more willing to delve deep into the most deeply hidden meanings of the word and to publicize their thoughts far and wide - this is the result of literary fiction's prominence within academia. Many of you will remember the standard college fare of reading aged novels for their literary merit, recall teachers ascribing thoughts and values to stories that did not intend them and were not written to conjure such imagery, parroting critics fifty years their seniors because it is comfortable, secure and, more than anything, easy. I am firmly of the opinion that the works of Harper Lee and other similarly widely read authors -- brilliant though they may be -- are part of a secluded and exclusive tier of novels that live well past their time. They may carry teachings and anecdotes that are of value even today, but this obsession with a shrinking number of authors that remain prominent due to the unwillingness of academic institutions to move beyond them needs to end.
I am not trying to tell you, or anyone else, that they may not read and enjoy the brand of fiction they feel resonates most strongly with them, or that they may not raise high the standard of their favorite authors, be it for their literary merit or their uncanny ability to make anyone laugh about anything. My issue lies with the people that subscribe to the newsletters of so few, place these rare and (far too often) hard-to-read authors on a pedestal, as if being hard to read or difficult to discern by itself is a boon or an achievement. Anyone can be contrived and long-winded, that feat in itself requires no great deal of literary skill - but only a select few can touch people in few words. Thus, my problem lies with the people -- Jonathan Jones presently chief among these -- that follow an almost preconceived schedule. They will read Austen, Marquez, Bukowski and swear that these produce works that are inherently better. It is a brand of pseudo-intellectualism that I find repugnant.
Which brings me to the author that sparked this entire rant: Terry Pratchett. Among all the authors I've read in my life (and I like to think that I've read many more than the average), Pratchett remains one of the most influential. His musings on what it means to be human, on the nature of friendship and the weights of responsibility may be hidden underneath three layers of dry British wit (but then again, is the hidden nature of social and psychological commentary not often tauted as one of the strengths of the literary?), but they are there nevertheless, and they are potent.
Pratchett's passing hit me very hard, harder than the death of any other author to take a walk with Death in my life, and any criticism leveled at Sir Terry invokes a response from me that is twice as I should be, yet not half as angry as I deserve to be. I quote:
I did flick through a book by him in a shop, to see what the fuss is about, but the prose seemed very ordinary. This utterly absurd notion that the prose of a page is indicative of the quality of an entire lifetime's worth of works whitens my knuckles. I have no qualms or enemies made with literary fiction of itself, but this high-nosed approach to all that isn't literary puzzles me to no end. If these are the kinds of people that consider themselves (and, perhaps, are considered) authorities on what is literary fiction and what is not, is it strange that those who would otherwise find some cursory interest in the works of authors such as Bukowski be scared off? Writers such as Jonathan Jones who fancy themselves the honor guard of the "better" writers are the very ones that drive this wedge in between literary readers and "ordinary" readers.
When Jonathan Jones, esteemed literary critic at the Guardian, deems the collected works of Terry Pratchett insufficient and unworthy of his attention despite their ability to captivate the minds and imaginations of millions, to invoke the dreams of generations' worth of children and adults alike, he perpeatuates the stereotype of literary fiction as something out of reach for most common readers, something by nature worth more than the likes of Pratchett and Jordan and Erikson. It's a stereotype I actively despise, and the stereotype -- or so I like to think, from my own high school and college experience -- that prevents greater breadth in literature. I promptly refuse to believe that Deadhouse Gates does not possess literary merit of its own, a slew of insights into the human condition and the nature of war, just as I refuse to believe that Marquez was an objectively better writer than Pratchett.
The magic of literature -- all kinds -- is in what we make for ourselves. This is one of my strongest convictions. Our thoughts, our reactions, our emotions, these all serve to conjure images that are more potent than anything the writer, no matter his mastery of prose or his insight into the human condition, could ever force onto the paper. The act of devaluing one author because there exists someone else whom you believe to be better, objectively, is a declaration of conflict, of literary war. I do not have to choose between Cook and Erikson any more than I have to choose between Marquez and Pratchett. They all have their individual merits, their unique quirks and masteries that create worlds and brands of enjoyment for me and every other reader. Limiting yourself and voicing your limits extends these boundaries beyond yourself and act to limit everyone else.
So when you say "Get real. Terry Pratchett is not a literary genius." and masquerade that opinion vaguely as fact, perhaps it would be better to evaluate your insight into the human condition. This belief that tastes are universal, that this limited shelf of books should be read and worshipped forever at the cost of all others, that enjoyment and insight and depth of imagination cannot be found in the works of a greater breadth of writers, it is entirely out of sync with reality.
If you worked your way through this rant made possible by a clickbait article from a writer hardly worth more than garbage from a journalistic standpoint, I hope I didn't bore you. I wrote it to say two things:
[1]Fuck you, Jonathan Jones, and the Guardian too. [2]I'll be on the Discworld.
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. Our thoughts, our reactions, our emotions, these all serve to conjure images that are more potent than anything the writer, no matter his mastery of prose or his insight into the human condition, could ever force onto the paper. That's a very good argument against reading I guess. I'm also reminded of a certain Knight of the sad face. Edit : the article sucks balls obviously, as any serious critic written by someone who hasn't read the book (or seen the movie) does. That and a bit too much importance given to what's being said on the internet is probably all there is to it though.
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East Gorteau22261 Posts
On September 01 2015 06:31 corumjhaelen wrote:Show nested quote +. Our thoughts, our reactions, our emotions, these all serve to conjure images that are more potent than anything the writer, no matter his mastery of prose or his insight into the human condition, could ever force onto the paper. That's a very good argument against reading I guess. I'm also reminded of a certain Knight of the sad face. That's a very good argument against reading I guess. I'm also reminded of a certain Knight of the sad face. Edit : the article sucks balls obviously, as any serious critic written by someone who hasn't read the book (or seen the movie) does. That and a bit too much importance given to what's being said on the internet is probably all there is to it though.
It's not so much an argument against reading -- I would never try to dissuade anyone from reading -- as it as an argument against reading with strong preconceived ideas of what things mean. It's how high school lit is forced down students' throats, and I think many literary critics never really leave that stage, and that they're poorer for it.
I'll admit to given the article way too much thought, but the disrespect leveled at Pratchett pisses me off. When I vent, I rant a lot
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my professional analysis of the article you posted is that it wants to troll and unleash a shit storm for clicks. well played, without this blog i would not have read it. you kind of achieved what you wanted to fight.
but no idea, maybe you adressed it in this blog, which i dont read. i rate it anyway.
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East Gorteau22261 Posts
On September 01 2015 06:59 GeckoXp wrote: my professional analysis of the article you posted is that it wants to troll and unleash a shit storm for clicks. well played, without this blog i would not have read it. you kind of achieved what you wanted to fight.
but no idea, maybe you adressed it in this blog, which i dont read. i rate it anyway.
You actually read an archived version of the article hosted outside the original page. The Guardian received no clicks or ad revenue from people directed to the article from this blog
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Even if it clearly wasn't your intent, I can't help but think it, alas, reads very well as an argument against reading.
Disagreeing with a pedagogic approach -that I know nothing of- certainly isn't enough for someone to understate the importance of the meaning of writing. I'm also quite in doubt about litterary critics being preoccupied only by that. You might be projecting something, and I'm sorry to say I couldn't help but feel a sentiment of insecurity about the merit of your tastes -certainly because of the geek culture context- was at the root of your post. I doubt you'd have rushed to defend someone questionning the litterary merits of Barbara Cartland, which if it were the case would seem to weaken your position.
I also won't hide that I vehemently disagree with your relativist vision of litterature, but I'm not sure this is a debate we want to have. I also think genres don't have much to do with litterary merits, if that's a consolation.
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Fiddler's Green42661 Posts
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United States15275 Posts
I'd be less annoyed at the article if the writer didn't inadvertently expose himself as a hack who must invoke the prescribed canon in self-defense. It's one thing to claim that a beloved writer is simply bad at his craft; it's another to have no references besides that which everyone else "of merit" deems good. Anyone perfunctory acquainted with literature can cite Marquez and Austen as superior writers. Who would dare challenge those claims? At least compare him to Stephenson, Chiang or someone else that embodies the merits of the genre. At least show that you understand the genre well enough to make such a claim
I also think genres don't have much to do with literary merits, if that's a consolation.
Sadly, most highbrow criticism disagrees.
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The very first thing JJ states in his article criticising Terry Pratchett is that he has not read a single book of Terry's. That invalidates his entire article; a monkey could roll its face across the keyboard and the result would hold just as much meaning. Don't get so worked up. I've read one book by Terry and have no regrets.
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Criticizing writing which you haven't read is atrocious regardless of what the writing is. That alone makes the article terrible.
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I can't help but feel that the author of that article isn't being serious. It's click-bait, isn't it? Isn't it? You can't make such a weighty claim and then follow it up by saying you haven't read a single one of the recently deceased books...
I for one love the time I spend on Discworld. There are few books which are so dense and well written that they inspire me to read them for a second, then third sitting. Pratchett is the esteemed author of many such books .
My aunt sent me a box full of paperback Discworld books, years ago. I had not the slightest inkling of what I was about to read .
I quickly divested myself of anything to do with literary fiction in high school as per the recommendations of my school librarian . He set me on the much more fulfilling track of science fiction and fantasy, fleshing out what I had been exploring for years.
IMO, literary fiction revels in "exploring the human condition" and doing fancy things with prose. Science fiction expands the scope of what it means to be human. I got a whole lot out of my first reading of Neuromancer than I ever did reading a whole host of literary novels during highschool.
And Zealously, I'm right there with you when it comes to Erikson. Coming off of book one, Deadhouse Gates was such a somber change of pace that I couldn't even finish it the first read through. Not because it wasn't well written, but because it was horrifying. Took a whole lot of stomach to wrap it up. The book helped me form a strong opinion about the nature of war and human conflict.
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Canada11218 Posts
Have you read Patrick Rothfuss's blog on Terry Pratchett? It contains an amazing interview by Terry, where he attacks the limited view of serious fiction.
http://blog.patrickrothfuss.com/2015/08/thoughts-on-pratchett/
I think it is the perfect antidote to the lazy critic whose foundation for criticism of Pratchett is to 'flick through a book by him.'
I always liked Tolkien's criticism of critics who failed to read the actual text "The habit, for instance, of pondering a summarized plot of Beowulf, denuded of all that gives it particular force or individual life, has encouraged the notion that its main story is wild, or tirivial, or typical, even after treatment. yet all stories, great and small, are one or more of these three things in such nakedness. The comparison of skeleton 'plots' is simply not a critical literary process at all."
Or his wry comment "a modern Cockayne would probably accuse him of not reading the 'literature' of his subject, the books written about the books... the original books are nearly buried. ...I have, of course, read The Beowulf, as have most (but not all) of those who have criticized it."
edit. I think he is serious. Or at least serious about his position as a contrarian. He apparently has a bit of a reputation in that regard.
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"I have never read a single one of his books and I never plan to."
Goes on to be a snobby arsehole about a series of books he's never read.
The Guardian should know better than to print this sort of hogwash.
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I wrote a long dumb post, but actually the core of what I want to say is pretty simple: There are kinds of fiction I enjoy which I would never call literature. Your favourite author doesn't have to be an author of great literature. Your favourite game doesn't have to be art. People don't have the recognize your top ten animes as being human achievements.
Also The Guardian plays both sides and even links to the counter article in Jonathan's article which is magnificently ham fisted. Both articles are insipid and the idea that they could have been intentionally coordinated really epitomizes journalism for me.
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I don't think your original post was dumb Chef^^
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United States15275 Posts
On September 02 2015 02:10 Chef wrote: There are kinds of fiction I enjoy which I would never call literature.
Considering literature is just written work, I fail to see the distinction.
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Yep, clearly when people wrote the word literature in this blog, they were thinking about my pupils' maths homework.
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Austria24416 Posts
Thanks to you I wasted my time reading this article. Go to hell.
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Baa?21242 Posts
I disagree with most of the OP because I think it appeals to populism and insecurity in the face of the contrived boogeyman of elitism, and I'll address it more in depth later. But for now I'll just say that you are attacking mostly a strawman, and that the sentiments expressed by the Guardian article aren't nearly as pervasive as people (not necessarily you in particularly) make them out to be. It was, as you astutely noted, a clickbait article (something that the Guardian has, sadly, turned to more and more often over the past years), and nothing else.
On September 02 2015 04:17 CosmicSpiral wrote:Show nested quote +On September 02 2015 02:10 Chef wrote: There are kinds of fiction I enjoy which I would never call literature. Considering literature is just written work, I fail to see the distinction.
Well, there's "literature," and there's "capital-L-Literature."
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Baa?21242 Posts
On September 01 2015 05:40 Zealously wrote:Literary Fiction is a buzzword. Or at least, that is what it has become. Agreed.Before I move beyond that opinion, let us look at the definition of the term: Literary fiction is a term principally used for certain fictional works that hold literary merit. In other words, they are works that offer deliberate social commentary, political criticism, or focus on the individual to explore some part of the human condition. Literary fiction is deliberately written in dialogue with existing works created with the above aims in mind. Literary fiction is focused more on themes than on plot. Fine, but misleading. Literary fiction is, as you pointed out, a buzzword. It's deliberately nebulous, and a work of "literary fiction" may have all, some, or none of the listed characteristics. Since you lifted the definition from Wikipedia, I'd like to point you to the "Alternative Definition" on the same page-
Neal Stephenson has suggested that while any definition will be simplistic there is a general cultural difference between literary and genre fiction, created by whom the author is accountable to. Literary novelists are typically supported by patronage via employment at a university or similar institutions, with the continuation of such positions determined not by book sales but by critical acclaim by other established literary authors and critics. Genre fiction writers seek to support themselves by book sales and write to please a mass audience.
I much prefer this definition because the intent and goal and "deliberations" of a work are notoriously difficult to ascertain. "Accountability" is also difficult, but the rest of Stephenson's definition stems more from empirical observation and is far less contentious and loaded, in my opinion. In a word, one could describe literary fiction as serious. In another, deep. One could, but does that mean one should? One could call literary fiction a plethora of other things as well, why gravitate towards these vague terms that carry connotations of differences in quality and merit?On a fundamental level, literary fiction is regarded as the antithesis of pulp fiction, the polar opposite written for the value of entertainment alone. Literary fiction -- in the view of its most vocal supporters -- strives to be something much greater, a manner of entertainment accessible only to those who are willing to think, feel and contemplate. This is a false dichotomy, and points to the heart of what I want to address. I often hear of these “vocal supporters” that strive for something loftier than “pulp fiction,” but where are they in actuality? You yourself go on to point out that “literary fiction is no enemy of popular or pulp fiction, it is merely a genre to itself.” At a glance, literary fiction is no different from any other fiction except for the target audience. As a general rule, literary fiction will never be as widely read as other brands of fiction because literary fiction is not written to be read as widely. It explores something else, whether that something is the deepest reaches of the human condition or the influence of prose on how a story can be told. Of itself, literary fiction is no enemy of popular or pulp fiction, it is merely a genre to itself. See above. I do want to add that “literary fiction will never be as widely read as other brands of fiction” is a patently false statement, and I will elaborate on that in the next section.Unfortunately, literary fiction garners the most zealous of readers. Frequent visitors of Reddit will recognize the snappy one-liner "r/iamverysmart", frequently posted in response to tirades aimed at the followers and fans of brands of fiction that to not subscribe to the banner of the literary. Unsurprisingly but nevertheless disappointingly, literary fiction appears to be the brand of fiction with the most enclosed and segregated readers. Presumptuous as it may be of me to say this, I have not encountered half the number of high-horsed and upstage enthusiasts of popular fiction ( any genre) as I have of their contraries. I grant you that I do not peruse the literary to half the extent that I read Science Fiction or Fantasy (genres often viewed as being of lesser literary merit), but my preconceived notion of literary fiction's most vocal supporters tends to prove true. I do think this is extremely presumptuous. You have constructed here a boogeyman of an elitist ivory tower reader passing judgment and condescension upon the plebeians when no such figure exists. Relating to my earlier point, I am curious about your declaration “literary fiction appears to be the brand of fiction with the most enclosed and segregated readers.” I believe there is a fundamental misconception of what constitutes literary fiction. I think it is pertinent to go through a brief history of the novel – for it is around the novel form that this discussion primarily revolves. “Literature,” as is commonly understood, encapsulates written material over a very long period of human history. Histories, verse, songs, and treatises dominated written media for the majority of that period. Prose fiction in the form of the novel as we know it today is a relatively recent development, only really coming into mainstream prominence in the ~18th – 19th centuries. The very etymology of the word “prose” carries meanings of directness, straightforwardness, and accessibility (this definition lives on in the word “prosaic” for example). What I’m trying to get at is that prose arose concurrently with literacy and higher demands for written material. The novel was never meant for a targeted, elite audience. The term “literary fiction” is likely to conjure up images of English class classics, many (admittedly not all) of which were part of this push towards widespread consumption of literature, and were received as such. Difficult though it may be to imagine today, these classics were not dusty tomes read and discussed by secluded intellectuals, but by the “common folk.”
The idea that literary fiction is the least read and most secluded compared to the other genres also cannot stand, since what is understood as literary fiction was in fact the only fiction for much of its life and was embraced by the populace as such. It is in fact much easier to argue that something classified as science fiction or fantasy are the segregated genres since they arose as a subset of fiction.
I take separate issue with your usage of Reddit as an example, since the Reddit demographic is actually notoriously non-, or even anti-, “literary.” A glance at r/books will show neverending “discussions” on high school readings lists and “pulp fiction” – in fact, it is more common to read an attack on literary elitism on Reddit than a defense!It makes sense that Nobel Prize winners will attract the kind of people that are both more willing to delve deep into the most deeply hidden meanings of the word and to publicize their thoughts far and wide - this is the result of literary fiction's prominence within academia. Many of you will remember the standard college fare of reading aged novels for their literary merit, recall teachers ascribing thoughts and values to stories that did not intend them and were not written to conjure such imagery, parroting critics fifty years their seniors because it is comfortable, secure and, more than anything, easy. I am firmly of the opinion that the works of Harper Lee and other similarly widely read authors -- brilliant though they may be -- are part of a secluded and exclusive tier of novels that live well past their time. They may carry teachings and anecdotes that are of value even today, but this obsession with a shrinking number of authors that remain prominent due to the unwillingness of academic institutions to move beyond them needs to end. Again, a curious example, considering Harper Lee is not considered particularly “literary.” The attack/comment on the Nobel is similarly misleading since the Nobel does not create or bestow literary merit, but rather seeks to recognize it. Your glib comment on “ascribing thoughts and values to stories that did not intend them and were not written to conjure such imagery” is an incredibly outdated criticism since it denies any connection that a reader may have with a work, independent of the author, among a whole host of other issues. I think these observations were levied out of ignorance to what literature and academia actually entails.I am not trying to tell you, or anyone else, that they may not read and enjoy the brand of fiction they feel resonates most strongly with them, or that they may not raise high the standard of their favorite authors, be it for their literary merit or their uncanny ability to make anyone laugh about anything. My issue lies with the people that subscribe to the newsletters of so few, place these rare and (far too often) hard-to-read authors on a pedestal, as if being hard to read or difficult to discern by itself is a boon or an achievement. Anyone can be contrived and long-winded, that feat in itself requires no great deal of literary skill - but only a select few can touch people in few words. Thus, my problem lies with the people -- Jonathan Jones presently chief among these -- that follow an almost preconceived schedule. They will read Austen, Marquez, Bukowski and swear that these produce works that are inherently better. It is a brand of pseudo-intellectualism that I find repugnant. This section exemplifies another all too common, and sadly misguided, attack on “literary fiction,” and it stems from insecurity and anti-intellectualism.
To start, the quality of being “hard to read” is not inherently good or bad, but it is often portrayed as such. And second, there is absolutely no bar of abstruseness that a book must pass before it is considered literary fiction. No reasonable observer would deny the existence of contrived and long-winded works of little merit, but nor would he deny the existence of the inverse, converse, and contrapositive. In addition, that observation is often stretched to claim that difficulty is bad. The fear that we have mistaken inaccessibility for brilliance has rubber banded to the point where people label difficulty as a drivel. On top of the phenomenon's roots in anti-intellectualism, pseudo-intellectualism, and empty polemic, none of this discussion has any correlation with the “literariness” of a book whatsoever!
I will once again take issue with your choice of examples. Austen is part of the aforementioned rise of the novel, and enjoyed moderate (but anonymous) success and readership throughout her lifetime and beyond, with an absolute explosion in popularity in the 20th century, both within academia and within the general populace. Bukowski is as anti-establishment as they come, writing on, and for, “the American lowlife.” I would argue that Bukowski enjoys greater renown amongst the laymen than among the literary academia. Garcia Marquez (it’s a double surname good sir) is both critically and commercially renowned. All three of these authors are in fact “pulp” writers by your earlier definition of “read by a broad audience.”Which brings me to the author that sparked this entire rant: Terry Pratchett. Among all the authors I've read in my life (and I like to think that I've read many more than the average), Pratchett remains one of the most influential. His musings on what it means to be human, on the nature of friendship and the weights of responsibility may be hidden underneath three layers of dry British wit (but then again, is the hidden nature of social and psychological commentary not often tauted as one of the strengths of the literary?), but they are there nevertheless, and they are potent. Pratchett's passing hit me very hard, harder than the death of any other author to take a walk with Death in my life, and any criticism leveled at Sir Terry invokes a response from me that is twice as I should be, yet not half as angry as I deserve to be. I quote: I did flick through a book by him in a shop, to see what the fuss is about, but the prose seemed very ordinary. This utterly absurd notion that the prose of a page is indicative of the quality of an entire lifetime's worth of works whitens my knuckles. I have no qualms or enemies made with literary fiction of itself, but this high-nosed approach to all that isn't literary puzzles me to no end. If these are the kinds of people that consider themselves (and, perhaps, are considered) authorities on what is literary fiction and what is not, is it strange that those who would otherwise find some cursory interest in the works of authors such as Bukowski be scared off? Writers such as Jonathan Jones who fancy themselves the honor guard of the "better" writers are the very ones that drive this wedge in between literary readers and "ordinary" readers. When Jonathan Jones, esteemed literary critic at the Guardian, deems the collected works of Terry Pratchett insufficient and unworthy of his attention despite their ability to captivate the minds and imaginations of millions, to invoke the dreams of generations' worth of children and adults alike, he perpeatuates the stereotype of literary fiction as something out of reach for most common readers, something by nature worth more than the likes of Pratchett and Jordan and Erikson. It's a stereotype I actively despise, and the stereotype -- or so I like to think, from my own high school and college experience -- that prevents greater breadth in literature. I promptly refuse to believe that Deadhouse Gates does not possess literary merit of its own, a slew of insights into the human condition and the nature of war, just as I refuse to believe that Marquez was an objectively better writer than Pratchett. I’m not here to defend Jonathan Jones, since I agree with you that he’s a clickbaiting troll. But I would reiterate that this is not at all reflective of reality or some establishment, either shadowy or prominent, seeking to oppress all works deemed unworthy.The magic of literature -- all kinds -- is in what we make for ourselves. This is one of my strongest convictions. Our thoughts, our reactions, our emotions, these all serve to conjure images that are more potent than anything the writer, no matter his mastery of prose or his insight into the human condition, could ever force onto the paper. The act of devaluing one author because there exists someone else whom you believe to be better, objectively, is a declaration of conflict, of literary war. I do not have to choose between Cook and Erikson any more than I have to choose between Marquez and Pratchett. They all have their individual merits, their unique quirks and masteries that create worlds and brands of enjoyment for me and every other reader. Limiting yourself and voicing your limits extends these boundaries beyond yourself and act to limit everyone else. This is exactly the point I’m getting at – we do not have to choose, and we don’t. The entire separation of literary fiction with pulp/genre/popular fiction is based on false premises. For some odd reason, the readers of popular fiction, by definition a majority, feel threatened by an artificially constructed elitist minority, when in fact the opposite is true. Pratchett and Rowling outsell Joyce and Nabokov by magnitudes, let alone any living “literary” author, and yet readers of popular fiction seem to carry a persecution complex. This persecution complex has led to the creation of this false dichotomy between what is literary and what is pulp, as well as the narrative that one is oppressing the other, when no such reality exists. What is considered literary fiction has never eschewed the elements of genre fiction: from Shelley’s Frankenstein to Ishiguro’s Buried Giant, literary authors are more than happy to incorporate elements of genre fiction without any consideration of even the notion of genre. Shelley wrote Frankenstein, sometimes considered the first modern science fiction novel, long before any of this silly genre/literature/pulp/elitism/etc. debate even existed. There is neither wall nor edict nor anything of substance delineating literary fiction from pulp fiction beyond what you imagine there to be. Works can and should be judged on their contents and not on their labels. In an utopia, that would be the norm. I understand that there are people, such as Jones here, who feel and/or act otherwise, but there are people like this on both “sides” of the “debate,” and they are a minority whom we have allowed to dictate the narrative, to everyone’s detriment. So when you say "Get real. Terry Pratchett is not a literary genius." and masquerade that opinion vaguely as fact, perhaps it would be better to evaluate your insight into the human condition. This belief that tastes are universal, that this limited shelf of books should be read and worshipped forever at the cost of all others, that enjoyment and insight and depth of imagination cannot be found in the works of a greater breadth of writers, it is entirely out of sync with reality.
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