“Literary” fiction is a number of things: a mode, a genre, a set of tropes and story structures and expectations, a club. (In the membership sense, not the hitting-people sense, although sometimes…)
Faced with the science-fictional nature of the present, more and more “literary” writers are attempting speculative fiction, with mixed success. Of course, as the article points out, plenty of classic writers have worked with spec-fic; Huxley and Orwell get mentioned, Shakespeare and Virginia Woolfe do not.
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Originally shared by David Brin
Okay, so science fiction has conquered the world. It is the engine behind most of the big, money-making successes of Hollywood. It propels much of the political narrative, from dread of Big Brother to obsession with social collapse scenarios. And now, each year, ever more purportedly “literary” authors try their hand at “doing future” – resulting in romances set in space, thinly repurposed westerns and navel-contemplating angst-ridden time travelers.
On Slate, Laura Miller appraises some of the most recent forays by artistically approved authors, and finds most of them wanting. Only then, what about Chabon? Bacigalupi? Rajamieni? Sue Burke? We embrace them. Yes, in part because they give a little love back. But also because they bothered to heed some of our history, some of our had-learned craft.
Still, should we be glad, or miffed?
“First they ignore you,” Gandhi said. “Then they mock you. Then they fight you. And then they claim to have loved you, all along.” Sigh.
bookmarked Thanks for posting, Mike.
I don’t think the author of that article has read a lot of scifi. She seems to think that character driven stories are not common in the genre. But, a familiarity with the genre shows that many of the best authors write/wrote character driven fiction: Gene Wolfe, Ursula K. LeGuin, Orson Scott Card, Walter Miller, and even Asimov. The whole notion of scifi being driven by the setting and/or the science rather than by characters is a stereotype that doesn’t hold up to a close examination.