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Re: There has to be something more, though. Macharius Send a noteboard - 19/12/2011 05:29:30 PM
The three you mention — Goodkind, Martin, Bakker — all use the "gritty" elements as you say, and there probably are fans who would like all three of them simply because of that. But there has to be something more to it. For example, I detest Goodkind but enjoy both Martin and Bakker. So the inclusion of grittiness can't be the only thing the books offer.


To be fair, any sane individual detests Goodkind. ;)

You mentioned three different types of gritty. Violence, sexuality, and profanity. Of those, I never mind profanity personally. While it can definitely be overdone, I can take a fair bit of it in a book.


My parenthetical comment about all three being used at once was the most important part. That said, your personal tolerance for such subjects is different from mine or any one else's. Also, profanity is the weakest condition for me and goes beyond mere words to actions typically coupled with violence.

One example is Robb Stark and the Red Wedding: was it really necessary to have Robb's head cut off and his direwolf's head sewn in its place? And that's one of the more "tame" parts of the SoIaF!

Anyway, I just wanted to say that there's more to some gritty fantasies than just the gritty. If there weren't, I doubt they would have nearly so many fans. At least, I hope not. Maybe I'm giving people too much benefit of the doubt there. :p


You are definitely giving people too much the benefit, given the content of a fair amount of contemporary popular culture these days.

But I'm also curious. If we're defining what makes a fantasy story gritty, does it need all three of those things? Scott Lynch's Locke Lamora books contain a lot of profanity, but very littly sexuality and only a normal level of fantasy violence. Would they count as gritty? Carey's Kushiel books contain a lot of sexuality, but not profanity or excessive violence. I'm curious where one would draw the line, if there is a line.


I hadn't considered Lynch as being "gritty", since the violent scenes, while described in detail, are actually pretty infrequent in my recollection of the story and the profanity never goes beyond dropping f-bombs all over the place (which does get tiresome, after a while).


Where would you draw the line?


I draw the line at where very detailed descriptions are necessary to the story being driven forward, and where they can be dispensed with entirely or mentioned only in brief on a "told-not-shown" basis. I know that's vague, but by its very nature the topic is entirely subjective.

Perhaps a counter example also involving Martin of what I do find acceptible is Tyrion's father's treatment of the girl Tyrion wanted to marry and having the barracks gangrape her. This works for me because we see how much of a bastard his father is, and how much it eats at Tyrion's soul years later: it was necessary to the story.

In general, though, the level of misogyny in Martin, (particularly) Bakker, etc is plain ridiculous. To claim that's a legitimate reflection of the real world is absurd. Yes, there is prostitution, rape, gender/sex discrimination, etc to be encountered in everyday life even in the most wealthy of communities - but even the worst specific examples to be found in history don't come close the everday life portrayals those authors describe in their stories.
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Violence, rape, and agency in the "gritty fantasies" - 17/12/2011 01:36:54 PM 1740 Views
Hm, ok. - 17/12/2011 10:51:21 PM 1138 Views
I think we largely agree - 17/12/2011 11:23:00 PM 1032 Views
Re: Hm, ok. - 26/12/2011 01:08:14 AM 1023 Views
Martin, Goodkind... - 18/12/2011 01:58:33 PM 1041 Views
More than just those - 18/12/2011 08:15:27 PM 972 Views
Re: More than just those - 26/12/2011 01:13:21 AM 896 Views
Re: Martin, Goodkind... - 26/12/2011 01:11:12 AM 912 Views
On more of a "meta" level, what makes a fantasy story "gritty" in the first place? - 19/12/2011 02:58:57 PM 916 Views
There has to be something more, though. - 19/12/2011 03:47:56 PM 1072 Views
Re: There has to be something more, though. - 19/12/2011 05:29:30 PM 949 Views
Re: There has to be something more, though. - 19/12/2011 09:06:14 PM 923 Views
I agree about Martin - haven't read enough Bakker to judge. - 19/12/2011 09:56:17 PM 979 Views
My problem with aSoIaF... - 20/12/2011 05:16:42 AM 971 Views
The Rhoynish influence pretty much ends in Dorne. - 20/12/2011 06:15:54 AM 952 Views
And that makes sense? - 20/12/2011 08:54:16 AM 1042 Views
Yes and no. - 20/12/2011 03:10:54 PM 1067 Views
Re: Yes and no. - 26/12/2011 03:12:01 AM 930 Views
Re: And that makes sense? - 18/05/2012 01:42:52 AM 1004 Views
Re: There has to be something more, though. - 20/12/2011 12:21:39 PM 881 Views
That's a question for each reader to answer then. - 20/12/2011 03:20:39 PM 783 Views
You appear to have not understood my point. - 20/12/2011 05:59:07 PM 831 Views
Re: There has to be something more, though. - 26/12/2011 03:14:04 AM 850 Views
Re: There has to be something more, though. - 26/12/2011 03:01:34 AM 876 Views
That's my general take as well - 20/12/2011 07:15:51 AM 866 Views
I like violence *NM* - 20/12/2011 07:51:39 PM 370 Views
Re: Violence, rape, and agency in the "gritty fantasies" - 25/12/2011 11:52:41 PM 1062 Views

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