Just spotted this interesting topic of yours, u... you do occasionally come up with them

. Though I have to say that I think you've bizarrely conflated two entirely unrelated issues. On to issue number 1, then.
ussusimiel wrote:We got about halfway through a discussion at the E'fest about the tension between Magic and Plot in fantasy. While I am not a fan of excessive Magic in fantasy stories, my theory is meant to be more descriptive than a negative judgement... ...Is my assumption that plot must be primary valid, or is it something that I should question? (Again it arises because some of these books are phenomenally popular.)
I don't at all get why you believe that magic is necessarily both separate and antithetical to plot? Surely it's all in the way it's handled?
Vraith wrote:The hardest part of dealing with Magic is [and maybe this is part of what u.'s problem is? Maybe someones already said this?] is that it can't be simple "magical." It has to be integral.
Yes absolutely, V. It's not about magic being necessarily at odds with, or invalidating plot. Instead, it's about how magic is handled by the author and about the authorial necessity of simultaneously evoking interest whilst maintaining a seamless credibility - which pretty much adds up to the essential goal of engrossing and causing a suspension of disbelief within the reader. If magic is used as part of any author's construction of his imaginary world, it needs to remain credible against the ground-rules that said author establishes in such creation - or to use V's apposite word, magic needs to be
integral. This is where holding the reader's interest comes in as well; I suspect that any author giving us a work where the central protagonist can achieve anything at all just by snapping his fingers and muttering "Shazam" - even if such omnipotence has been beforehand established as part of the authorial world construction - is going to be seen as trite and uninteresting. Presumably this is why not so many novels are written with God as the hero.
Magic used as a
deus ex machina is always going to result in a suspension of disbelief shattering clunk, but in exactly the same way as someone doing something entirely out of character would - it wouldn't "fit". (I'm kind of thinking of Loric's krill here, which by the LCs has become an uber-puissant theurgic version of a Swiss army knife). Anyhow, u, I agree with your listing of those books where as you put it, magic overshadows plot, or as I'd put it, magic is thrown in carelessly. "Seamless credibility" and "in-universe realism" go out of the window as the demands/machinations of plot become all too obvious.
As an aside and speaking of seamless credibility, I'm reminded of the famous story that had to do with an episodic thriller radio series a few decades, where the hero was left in a cliff-hanger predicament at the end of each show. The main writer had left said hero in what looked like an impossible position at the end of last week's show and gone on vacation. None of the secondary writers could work out any way in which the hero could possible extricate himself and the show's producer was going nuts. Fortunately he managed to get hold of the main writer and persuade him to return from vacation just in time to pen the forthcoming week's script. The main writer duly sat down at his typewriter, briefly viewed the script of the previous week's show to remind himself of how he'd left things and then without the slightest shame or hesitation typed the immortal line "With one bound, our hero was free".
And now on to the way WAY more contentious issue number 2. Heh.
ussusimiel wrote:I have been developing a theory that Magic is feminine and Plot is masculine, and that excessive magic essentially renders Plot irrelevant (emasculates it, you might say! *ouch*)... ...It's here that my sociological training (via feminist studies) kicks in.
Whoa! Hold on there. Magic is feminine and plot's masculine? And you attribute such a piece of gender stereotyping to your feminist sociological training??? What's the (no doubt unwitting) implication here? Achieving a rigorously disciplined plot structure is more suited to rational scientifically-minded males, whereas resorting to magic as a plot device is more likely to be the province of scatter-brained females (bless 'em and their pink fluffy brains)??? I'm sure this isn't in the least what you intended to say, but holy crap, dude! I'm entirely with Murrin here when he says:-
I'm Murrin wrote:That masculine/feminine bit doesn't sound right to me. Seems like a bit of a gender essentialist approach, which I'll always disagree with.
Having said that, there is a somewhat related point about the difference between male and female magic, but
within the fantasy convention. It's the difference between witch magic and wizard magic, if you like. Traditionally, the magic of wizards is learned and involves rules and careful implementation - one error in an incantation, or an ingredient or in the drawing of a pentagram and as we all know, disaster ensues. Witchy magic is typically different - it's innate and instinctual and more often involves psychology (or as Nanny Ogg would have it, "persickolloggy". Mind you, Nanny Ogg also has trouble with the word "banana"... it's not that she doesn't know how to start to spell it, it's just that she's unsure how to
stop spelling it).
Speaking of Nanny Ogg and the core convention differences between the magic of wizards and witches, can I exhort one and all to read Terry Pratchett. Compare and contrast the characters of Mustrum Ridcully, the archchancellor of Unseen University and the Discworld's premier wizard, and Granny Esmerelda Weatherwax, the doyenne of the Discworld witches and mistress of headology (and a great deal more besides). Perhaps start by reading "Carpe Jugulum", which also happens to be full of vampires (and not, as we're told "vampyrs", because that's just so last week) and yet still laugh-out-loud delightfully readable. The man's a genius.
Five bucks says that Av chimes in here to add his unswerving support for Pratchett - that is, if he notices this thread...