Luci, did you say something?Lucimay wrote:off topic is an understatement and how come everytime i bring up structure and hero journey everybody patently IGNORES me???
*stomps off in a huff*

Moderator: I'm Murrin
Damelon wrote:Luci, did you say something?Lucimay wrote:off topic is an understatement and how come everytime i bring up structure and hero journey everybody patently IGNORES me???
*stomps off in a huff*
Kerouac wrote fiction? I thought he wrote autobiography that he passed off as fiction. Same (to a degree) with Cheever and John Updike and a number of other modern literary greats. If all you do is change the names, it hardly qualifies as fiction in my book.taraswizard wrote:A final point to say all fiction is fantasy, since it's by definition fictional is really a reductio ad absurdum and adds little meaning to the dialogue. Furthermore, there is really little fantastical about the mimetic texts of Robert B. Parker, Sarah Paretsky, John Cheevers, or Jack Kerouac.
In defense of Jack. Dean Moriarty is not Neal Cassidy, and Japhy Rydyer is not Gary Snyder, the poet and translator. Both characters have certain and maybe numerous characteristics and idiosyncrasies that are based on the RL people named. Additionally, On the Road is not a verbatim travelogue, nor is it a creative non-fictional account, of cross country road trips taken by Jack and Neal, nor is Dharma Bums snapshot of activities Jack and Gary went about doing in the 1950s.Kerouac wrote fiction? I thought he wrote autobiography that he passed off as fiction.
.that's been done since the begining of SF writing
All in all, I agree with this. Let me opine that Fantasy today, for the most part, is in a tight orbit of the immense influence of Tolkien. The medieval setting, the journey of discovery, the use of the unexplained, or barely explained, to influence events. Almost every book of Fantasy today owes to him.Malik23 wrote:Donaldson wrote:Unlike every other form of storytelling . . . fantasy is not *about* material reality, or even material plausibility. It does not describe or comment upon rational or tangible observations of the external world; the world of science and technology. Nor does it describe or comment upon verifiable observations of the human condition, in general or in particular, through research into the past or extrapolation into the future. Fantasy is *about* metaphysical reality, the intersection of the spiritual with the psychological. It describes and comments upon non-rational and (ideally) universal observations of the internal world; the world of the unverifiable; the world of imagination and nightmare, of hope and despair and faith; the world of magic.
I agree with SRD here. Science Fiction operates with rational explanations for events. Sure there are examples of hybrids in SF where some aspect of Fantasy is involved, but in the main it's more logical. Processes are familiar or are explained as an advance of science. That's not to say that SF can't suspend belief; I'm thinking here of ships jetting about the galaxy without thought of the speed of light. Historically, this genre owes much to Verne and H.G. Wells.Malik23 wrote:Donaldson wrote:Nevertheless the distinctions are important. In sf, the differences between our reality and the secondary creation are explained materially (rationally): x, y, or z has happened in science/technology, and therefore reality is changed. In fantasy, the differences are explained magically (arationally): x, y, or z powers (which can be imagined, but which defy any material explanation) exist, and therefore reality is changed. As I see it, such distinctions have profound implications. For example, fantasy is--sort of by definition--a journey into the non-rational possibilities of the human mind (a journey inward): sf is a journey into the rational possibilities of consensus reality (a journey outward).