SF/F Commentary

SF/F Commentary

Literary Explorations: Epic Fantasy = Crushingly Conservative? (A Sorta Response to Liz Bourke)

First, read this. Have you read it now?  Good.  I want to start by briefly talking about two of the central problems that Ms. Bourke rightly struggles with throughout her post (and which many readers had issues developing or agreeing to on their own) — definitions and the perception of their application.  For the sake of space and time — you should read the actual thread anyway — I’m going break this down into little, methodical sections. I.  Definitions The two main terms at work here are “conservative” and “epic fantasy.”  The latter is somewhat impossible to define, in part because subgenres are, in effect, convenient marketing categories.  There might be something called “epic fantasy,” but I don’t think anyone can approach a satisfactory definition.  I tend to imagine “epic fantasy” as a matter of scale.  In most works in this class, what is at stake is not the individual so much as the entire world (or the world as the characters know it).  Thus, any actions the heroes take is in an attempt to save the world from destruction, whether literally through some kind of magic or figuratively through some sort of violent conquest.  Thus, Lord of the Rings and A Song of Ice and Fire share something in common with Karen Miller’s Kingmaker, Kingbreaker series.  What is crucial, for me, is that the stakes are greater than a single, isolated community. “Conservative,” however, is a far simpler term to define.  While some arguments about its supposed meaning are interesting, they tend to rely on isolated meanings within individual communities, which themselves are often reductive and meaningless.  Saying that “conservative” means “smaller government” is to fall prey to a particular narrative about the term, one which itself is often self-contradictory.  “Conservative,” then, must be taken not for what people say it is, but what it does.  It ultimately comes down to roots.  If conservative is both “restrained” and “protective,” then it follows suit that the term refers to a wide range of possibilities:  from traditional cultural movements to general conservation, and so on and so forth.  This is partly why we identify “conservative” most often in opposition to “progressive,” as the latter actively seeks change (not always “good” change), where the other frequently wants to prevent or slow it down (not always a “bad” thing). II.  The Perception of the Definitions’ Application There’s no point debating “epic fantasy” and trying to find an adequate definition to apply to this scenario.  In other words, I’m skipping it here for the more interesting questions related to conservatism. If we take as given that “conservative” rests in opposition to “progressive,” I think it becomes clear that much of what falls under the “epic fantasy” category is neither wholly one or the other — with exception, of course. Take Lord of the Rings as an example.  From the start, the major conflict of the novel centers around the ring and preventing some other force (the progressive change) from using it to take over.  This is an inherently conservative idea:  maintaining the status quo.  And that’s not a bad thing in this case.  Sauron, after all, would likely change the world of Middle Earth so drastically as to render the limited freedoms of such a world void, thus plunging everyone into “darkness” (a melodrama that rests on an assumption).  Avoiding that problem is naturally conserving the present because it is simply the better option.  But the narrative is not wholly conservative, for one of the subplots is the “Return of the King,” which assumes that one man will return to his rightful place among his people, thus bringing back a lost ideal and taking the world of Middle Earth into its next mythic phase:  the Age of Man.  Thus, the ending of Lord of the Rings offers a progressive shift away from the status quo.  We can assume that certain things will always remain the same (conserved), but other things will change (progressed) — hopefully for the better. This is true for many other epic fantasies too.  Karen Miller’s Kingmaker, Kingbreaker series follows a similar conservative/progressive structure.  The narrative opens with the ascension of a previously “crippled” (non-magic) son, who must protect the kingdom against the faltering “dome” that protects everyone from the dark forces beyond (forces connected to the goddess who made magic possible — it’s complicated).  But because he has no true magic himself, he must rely on a “commoner” (Asher) to do the work for him.  Thus, Asher, the protagonist, gets caught up in the court politics of a world where only certain people are allowed magic, ensuring a certain degree of “slavery” among certain classes, and untold freedoms among others.  The narrative is, more negatively than in LOTR, about conserving the present — protecting it from what will undoubtedly look a lot worse.  But the end of the duology posits an entirely different future:  one where Asher ascends to power, upending the entire social system of this isolated “continent” and taking the people there to the next stage in their cultural development.  These are good things, we assume, because it means granting certain freedoms to everyone (progressing) while maintaining certain privileges for others (conserving). All of this is to suggest that there are simply no easy dichotomies when it comes to conservative and progressive.  The two work against and with one another for the betterment of the whole.  At least, that’s how it’s supposed to work.  In a great deal of fantasy, it works wonderfully.  In real life?  Well, you just have to look at the U.S. Congress for your answer… Thoughts?

SF/F Commentary

Retro Nostalgia: Forbidden Planet (1956) and Romancing the Science

I have never seen Forbidden Planet.  It’s one of those films that SF enthusiasts say you have to see, but I have never made the time to do so.  Until now… As a first time viewer of a now-50+-year-old movie, I find it necessary to offer a number of concessions:  1) I cannot expect the visuals to meet contemporary standards of “realism” (limited budgets + limited technology); 2) I cannot expect characters to develop in ways that are anything but consistent with a 1950s cultural milieu; and 3) I must accept pseudoscience.  That’s more or less how I came into the film.  After all, if you watch Forbidden Planet, you’ll become aware of the limitations of the cinematic medium during the 50s, the rampant, almost “rapey” sexism that was all too common during the “glory days,” and the laughable nonsense that passed for “science” then (and still passes for “science” today). And yet, for such a campy film, Forbidden Planet does something that only the best SF films do:  eloquently visualizes and explores the science of a future world, even if, upon further inspection, much of that science is impossible, unexplained, or downright false (it was the 50s, after all).  The opening scenes, for example, imagine a future in which FTL is possible, but not in the fanciful and convenient way of Star Wars, which wouldn’t appear for another 20 years.  Rather, the crew reminds us of two important things:  traveling to other stars takes an extraordinary amount of time and deceleration is not a “cakewalk.”  Navigators must set the deceleration process on a “timer” and climb into the anti-gravity pods to wait the process out.  Nothing is every quite explained.  How do the pods work?  Why do they turn strange colors and “disappear”?  We just don’t know. The film is littered with these moments, from explanations about the alien technology to incredible closeups of the navigation systems of the reconnaissance ship, etc.  Moments like these serve to rationalize the irrational things to come — in the case of Forbidden Planet, we are meant to accept that one’s “id” is capable of manifesting as an unstoppable, invisible monster (provided one’s mind has been manipulated by alien technologies).  They are also what one might call “scientific excess,” the necessity of which is readily apparent:  what I’ve already suggested (so we can rationalize the irrational) and to establish the science fiction frame (this is not our world; it is a future world). This is not unusual in science fiction film.  I cannot speak for the wide range of SF film leading up to the release of Forbidden Planet in 1956, since that period is hardly my forte.  However, many classic SF films have gone to almost masturbatory levels to establish scene/setting through scientific excess.  2001:  A Space Odyssey (1968) provided us with two extraordinary sequences inside massive, moving sets, the object of which was to mimic for the audience how artificial gravity (and stasis pods, for that matter) might work on a visual level.  The scenes are beautiful, if not a tad dated, and perform exactly the same function as the opening minutes of Forbidden Planet (we’re meant to accept the unexplained monoliths and the Starchild).  Alien (1979) and parts of Aliens (1986) are similarly focused on the technological mechanics of the future.  The former contains no dialogue until nearly 6 minutes into the film, instead focusing on a) the computational abilities of the Nostromo (which haven’t aged well), and b) the long process of waking from stasis.  Aliens reverses this imagery by showing the decrepit condition of the Nostromo‘s escape shuttle, which salvage crews must cut into before they can extricate the sole survivor of the previous film — a person nobody was expecting to find anyway.  Rather than focusing on how technology has “advanced,” the sequence focuses on how the very technology that made the previous film possible has remained static in time, providing the necessary jolt of reality that Ripley will need to reach the next stage as a hero.  The result?  We’re drawn into the world so we can more easily take that leap of faith when the seemingly impossible alien(s) show up. Contemporary SF films no longer do this.  There are exceptions, of course, but almost all SF films these days focus on setting, vague definitions of character, or imagery.  While technology exists in these films, it is often backdrop, not scene-starter.  The characters interact with the new world, but they are disconnected from it — disengaged, if you will.  Even the latest Star Trek film tossed aside the pseudoscientific jargon that made the franchise the subject of many linguistic jokes; Abrams opted for a flashier, more “agile” narrative in what I can only assume was an attempt to breathe (or bleed) new life into the franchise. I’m not sure why this trend apparently died off.  Budgetary reasons?  Were audiences disinterested in the extraordinary details many SF writers/directors put into their work because of pacing concerns?  Your guess is probably as good as mine (unless you’re an SF film scholar and have answers).  One thing is for certain:  it’s a fascinating and illuminating SF trend.  Perhaps we’ll get something like it again one day…

SF/F Commentary

Literary Explorations: Rethinking the Classics — Ringworld and the Golden Age (Brief Thoughts)

One of my colleagues recently asked me whether I think he should finish reading Ringworld by Larry Niven.  While he didn’t say so directly, I assume that he isn’t enjoying his first foray into the Known Space universe.  There are probably a lot of good reasons for that.  His research interests lean toward the last 30 years of science fiction, with special attention to works that fall loosely into the cyberpunk, biopunk, and ecocriticism categories — authors like Paolo Bacigalupi, William Gibson, Pat Cadigan, etc.  He’s made a solid effort to read the classics, though, since knowing about the history of the genre is important to the scholarship. Personally, I think Ringworld is a fascinating book that falls prey to its age.  True, it is one of the most important works of science fiction ever written.  True, it has affected genre in profound ways.  But it is also a work that doesn’t connect as well with contemporary audiences as it did in the decades immediately following publication (1970).  That said, it has not aged as much as the works of the Golden Age, which have suffered the effects of time more acutely than the stuff from the New Wave. My first foray into the Known Space Universe was via an abridged audiobook of Ringworld. I think this is simply what happens to all literature over time.  While we still read Dickens, Bronte, Faulkner and Hughes today, we do so primarily because they are “classic” writers (with some exceptions, of course).  The real discussion these days surrounds works that have more relevance to the now, from O’Connor and McCarthy to O’Brien and Wallace to Adichie and Atwood.  The list goes on and on.  I don’t think this is a revelation, though.  That’s just how literature works — like any other field.  We don’t become stuck in time, as it were. Science fiction, however, has been accused of having the exact opposite problem:  the Golden Age and so on and so forth are viewed nostalgically, not as stepping stones in a much larger literary movement.  I’m not convinced this is wholly true, but it is certainly true in some cases — Myke Cole would probably agree.  We are often so focused on what were great works “back then,” and not on the great works of “just a short while ago” or “now.”  “We” as in “the community.”  That’s not our fault really.  Because most of us think of science fiction as having that “sensawunda” feel, it becomes increasingly difficult to surprise.  So we go back to a time when SF did what we want “all” SF to do, in a way that seems or feels like it’s divorced from the unfortunate and material reality we all live in.  Golden Age/Classic SF doesn’t care about how the world really turned out and what that might mean for future generations (so the nostalgic argument goes); it just wants to take us to the future, to show us grand adventures, exciting technologies and peoples, and so on and so forth. Whatever you might think of the classics, the idea of a giant ring world is still pretty amazing.  But for someone who doesn’t have that experience, these works feel dated.  Lost.  Even somewhat overwhelming in their “simplicity” and “tone” (illusions, of course).  Ringworld, then, is a book that simply falls prey to a duality in genre:  the folks I’ll call the Sensawundas and the others (the Contemporaries).  Some might say the Sensawundas are winning… What do you think about the classics?  In particular, what do you think of Ringworld?  What did you think of it when you first read it?  The comments are yours.

SF/F Commentary

Literary Explorations: When to Re-read?

Today, I had a strange moment of contemplation:  since I don’t re-read books all that often, I wondered about the criteria for re-reading and what re-reading does to our perception of the work.  Do we re-read books we simply love, or are there certain elements that compel re-reading?  And what happens to a book when we re-read it (or to ourselves, for that matter)? But as I thought about this subject, it occurred to me that re-reading is a personal affair.  After all, my reasons for re-reading a book may not coincide with yours, in part because we’re not the same person, but also because there are probably thousands of reasons why people re-read (and no two reasons are necessarily the same).  For example, most of my re-reading falls into the following categories: Books for my research or teaching (PhD stuff, in particular — Tobias Buckell and Nalo Hopkinson will have been re-read at least 6 times in the last three years) Books I’ve loved (when I was a kid, I re-read the Goosebumps and Hardy Boys books over and over and over) Books I’ve found compelling and decided to re-read to get at some of the things I didn’t see last time (such as 1984) Your reasons?  Similar, perhaps, but also varied, I imagine.  It’s not often that I re-read a book for any other reason than one of the ones listed above, and the kinds of books that fall into these various categories vary by content and genre.  Research books are often spread across genres, from mainstream to SF/F to theory to history and so on.  Most of the books I’ve decided to read because I wanted to get deeper into the work are of the classic variety — usually works of genre that exist outside the Pulp Era paradigm, such as 1984, Brave New World, various works from the New Wave (Octavia Butler and Samuel R. Delany in particular) and so on.  And those works that I re-read because I love them tend to have a nostalgic flare to them, from some of my favorite children’s books to those few works that got me obsessed with SF/F in the first place. But I don’t do a lot of re-reading.  All in all, I’ve probably only re-read 5% of the books on my “have read” list.  There are good reasons for this too.  My shelves are full of unread books; unless I read something that knocks my socks off, I’m not likely to return to it (for an unspecific time, since I am not currently dead).  Why re-read when you can have new adventures? Of course, re-reading has its own advantages.  When you re-read, you discover new things.  I’ve read 1984 five times.  It’s not a book for everyone, but I find that re-reading it exposes a lot of elements and themes that I never noticed before.  Undoubtedly, that has something to do with age.  Some books, I think, open up like flowers the further away from the first reading experience you get.  1984 is one of those books (for me). But is there also a time when you shouldn’t re-read?  I’ve heard people say that Lord of the Rings is a great book to read as a teenager, but also that it loses its luster as you age.  I have no opinion on that particular point (for now), but I do think there are some books that deserve to remain as memories.  After all, a great deal of the stuff we loved as younger people certainly changes in tone as we age and become more knowledgeable about the world.  I know some of the kid’s books I recall reading over and over will probably look like sub-literature to my current self.  For me, keeping the image of so many great reading experiences is more important that indulging my curiosity. What about you?  Do you re-read?  If so, when and why?  Do you think there is a way to tell when you shouldn’t re-read something for your own good?

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