Re: I think the two of you have taken too narrow a meaning of 'great'
DomA Send a noteboard - 28/02/2011 11:51:49 PM
Not really, as if you've read my earlier posts too, you should have seen that in my view there's a clear distinction between popular literature in general and "great literature" and that I find it stupid to apply the same critical grid to both. I happen to enjoy many kinds of popular literature too, and to be very impressed by the skills of many popular writers at keeping me entertained... I watch many TV series and enjoy many blockbusters, but I don't expect from them what I expect from auteur cinema (which I also enjoy a lot). Art is art, and quality entertainment is quality entertainment.
All I ask from the prose of a popular writer is that it's grammatically correct, devoided of too many irritating writing habits/tricks, and otherwise don't get in the way of the story. If it's beyond that so much the better, but I don't need that to be entertained by a writer. Popular literature is a great deal more about story and characters than about language, great literature is more about pushing the language and writing it to the point it becomes art. Pop Lit. shouldn't be judged as Art (unless it's incidentally both - Hugo is considered both as a great writer and a great popular writer, for instance), because it isn't. There are a lot great popular writers than there are true great writers, and few great writers have left many masterpieces in their canon.
You seem to have taken my list as something it isn't. I was simply asked to list a few of the writers I have read which I consider great writers - Art - and I wrote my own list reacting to Tom's in large part. I've left out many I've read too few novels from (eg: Jane Austen), didn't really have a set opinion about, forgot others and so on, and I've pointed out I can't be a great judge of American (and even anglo-saxon) literature as I made it a low priority by choice (call it a downside of the imperialism of the US entertainment industry... it so aggressively invaded the field of pop culture and entertainment that if I spent much time on American higher culture too (and yes, it exists), there'd be no time left for anyone else.).
That's more the exception than the norm with most of the writers I've listed, but you also have to consider my culture is not yours, and the French literary tradition is (and even more, was) quite different from the anglo-saxon one. French and English for all their similarities remain very different languages, and have different aesthetics.
Most of the writers I've listed are hardly florid and in fact some like Zola, Camus are recognized for the very opposite!
As for "poetic", this has a slightly different value in the French language (and it's not exclusive to French... Japanese, Russian, Chinese... many languages values the poetic aspect of prose a great deal more than it's done in English (except of course in poetry in its various forms), that values "efficiency" over beauty in prose. By "poetic" the French don't necessarily mean the language is close to the aesthetics of classic poetry. It's more the combination of how interesting it sounds aloud (the musicality, the rhythm), and how evocative it is.
As an aside, that's hardly the sole standards by which French culture has traditionally judged what is and isn't "great literature", especially foreign ones, for which the French just don't expect French aesthetics and are far more interested in substance, vision, perspective for foreign books (they value that a lot in French literature too, of course - it's not all or necessarily primarly about "beautiful prose". The French don't like beautiful prose without substance (but do say that writing great ideas with average prose is a shame!).
Not much of the beauty of Austen's english survives in translation (translation levels the prose a lot), and her prose and style don't fit the canons of the French novel. She's much admired in France for her tone, her insights and her delightful portraits, not much is ever said about her prose, except by those who've read her in English. Novelists like Hemingway have been much admired (some more there than in America, as it happens), and the American novel in general has been very influential on modern French writers since WWII. Again, it's hardly for the linguistic aspect of their writing (though they've influenced the modern French), it's about the ideas/perspectives and also the form of the novel, quite different from the classic French tradition. When the French discuss much the prose of foreign works (which they do.. it's still today a very literary culture) it's usually because they've read them in the original language.
Verne is considered one of the great storytellers and one of the best writers of French popular literature, but even more so than Dumas he isn't considered one of the "grands écrivains" (and he didn't want to be, that's not why he wrote for!).
Verne's writing style is far too simple and conventional for that. His genius was storytelling and his keen imagination to use recent discoveries and extrapolate from them. Verne was never of much interest to the French literary circles. Dumas more so, but it's in part because he fuelled himself so many literary debates in his time (and shared his opinion the competition...) rivals) and one day would claim he ought to be considered a great writer, the greatest alive, but when mocked or attacked he tended to reply he wrote popular literature, that he wrote to be read by the most people, not for the elite.
Why Dumas isn't considered among the great writers (and rather called a great popular writer) is largely due to his "style brouillon" (his "messy"/botched style). Dumas was a feuilleton writer more than a genuine novelist. He wrote fast, he rarely re read himself, published the chapters as soon as written. He had a classical education and he could write grammatically flawless sentences in first draft. But his style isn't researched, carefully crafted like those of the other great 19th century writers. Make no mistake, Dumas was a master of the feuilleton genre, there are countless others in the genre, and novelists, that were mediocre and are long forgotten. Dumas was an excellent craftsman, a writing machine and a born storyteller.
Of course, it never helped Dumas's reputation as a writer that it's well established (even in his days) that it's very hard to determine what Dumas created and wrote himself and what Auguste Macquet planned and drafted and that Dumas just revised. It's established that Monte Cristo is mostly Dumas, but it's believed by many scholars that Dumas's personal contribution to the planning and actual writing of Les Trois Mousquetaires isn't terribly large. It's not easy to judge Dumas a great writer when it can't even be determined beyond doubt what his real contribution to some of his best novels actually is... but then, would Macquet have been able to write the novels without Dumas revising his style and prose? Hard to tell...
All I ask from the prose of a popular writer is that it's grammatically correct, devoided of too many irritating writing habits/tricks, and otherwise don't get in the way of the story. If it's beyond that so much the better, but I don't need that to be entertained by a writer. Popular literature is a great deal more about story and characters than about language, great literature is more about pushing the language and writing it to the point it becomes art. Pop Lit. shouldn't be judged as Art (unless it's incidentally both - Hugo is considered both as a great writer and a great popular writer, for instance), because it isn't. There are a lot great popular writers than there are true great writers, and few great writers have left many masterpieces in their canon.
You seem to have taken my list as something it isn't. I was simply asked to list a few of the writers I have read which I consider great writers - Art - and I wrote my own list reacting to Tom's in large part. I've left out many I've read too few novels from (eg: Jane Austen), didn't really have a set opinion about, forgot others and so on, and I've pointed out I can't be a great judge of American (and even anglo-saxon) literature as I made it a low priority by choice (call it a downside of the imperialism of the US entertainment industry... it so aggressively invaded the field of pop culture and entertainment that if I spent much time on American higher culture too (and yes, it exists), there'd be no time left for anyone else.).
Almost all of the authors you've mentioned are in a very similar style - highly descriptive or even poetic prose, deep imagery, often long with many side-branchings and digressions.
That's more the exception than the norm with most of the writers I've listed, but you also have to consider my culture is not yours, and the French literary tradition is (and even more, was) quite different from the anglo-saxon one. French and English for all their similarities remain very different languages, and have different aesthetics.
Most of the writers I've listed are hardly florid and in fact some like Zola, Camus are recognized for the very opposite!
As for "poetic", this has a slightly different value in the French language (and it's not exclusive to French... Japanese, Russian, Chinese... many languages values the poetic aspect of prose a great deal more than it's done in English (except of course in poetry in its various forms), that values "efficiency" over beauty in prose. By "poetic" the French don't necessarily mean the language is close to the aesthetics of classic poetry. It's more the combination of how interesting it sounds aloud (the musicality, the rhythm), and how evocative it is.
As an aside, that's hardly the sole standards by which French culture has traditionally judged what is and isn't "great literature", especially foreign ones, for which the French just don't expect French aesthetics and are far more interested in substance, vision, perspective for foreign books (they value that a lot in French literature too, of course - it's not all or necessarily primarly about "beautiful prose". The French don't like beautiful prose without substance (but do say that writing great ideas with average prose is a shame!).
Not much of the beauty of Austen's english survives in translation (translation levels the prose a lot), and her prose and style don't fit the canons of the French novel. She's much admired in France for her tone, her insights and her delightful portraits, not much is ever said about her prose, except by those who've read her in English. Novelists like Hemingway have been much admired (some more there than in America, as it happens), and the American novel in general has been very influential on modern French writers since WWII. Again, it's hardly for the linguistic aspect of their writing (though they've influenced the modern French), it's about the ideas/perspectives and also the form of the novel, quite different from the classic French tradition. When the French discuss much the prose of foreign works (which they do.. it's still today a very literary culture) it's usually because they've read them in the original language.
- Verne: Not just his imagination, but for his characters.
- Conan Doyle: Each story is masterfully crafted.
(I find Dickens quite mixed)
- Conan Doyle: Each story is masterfully crafted.
(I find Dickens quite mixed)
Verne is considered one of the great storytellers and one of the best writers of French popular literature, but even more so than Dumas he isn't considered one of the "grands écrivains" (and he didn't want to be, that's not why he wrote for!).
Verne's writing style is far too simple and conventional for that. His genius was storytelling and his keen imagination to use recent discoveries and extrapolate from them. Verne was never of much interest to the French literary circles. Dumas more so, but it's in part because he fuelled himself so many literary debates in his time (and shared his opinion the competition...) rivals) and one day would claim he ought to be considered a great writer, the greatest alive, but when mocked or attacked he tended to reply he wrote popular literature, that he wrote to be read by the most people, not for the elite.
Why Dumas isn't considered among the great writers (and rather called a great popular writer) is largely due to his "style brouillon" (his "messy"/botched style). Dumas was a feuilleton writer more than a genuine novelist. He wrote fast, he rarely re read himself, published the chapters as soon as written. He had a classical education and he could write grammatically flawless sentences in first draft. But his style isn't researched, carefully crafted like those of the other great 19th century writers. Make no mistake, Dumas was a master of the feuilleton genre, there are countless others in the genre, and novelists, that were mediocre and are long forgotten. Dumas was an excellent craftsman, a writing machine and a born storyteller.
Of course, it never helped Dumas's reputation as a writer that it's well established (even in his days) that it's very hard to determine what Dumas created and wrote himself and what Auguste Macquet planned and drafted and that Dumas just revised. It's established that Monte Cristo is mostly Dumas, but it's believed by many scholars that Dumas's personal contribution to the planning and actual writing of Les Trois Mousquetaires isn't terribly large. It's not easy to judge Dumas a great writer when it can't even be determined beyond doubt what his real contribution to some of his best novels actually is... but then, would Macquet have been able to write the novels without Dumas revising his style and prose? Hard to tell...
Can someone explain to me how Jordan is not a particularly good writer?
21/02/2011 05:41:31 PM
- 3190 Views
I personally see it as more of RJ being a fantastic story teller, but not a well structured writer.
21/02/2011 06:44:21 PM
- 1581 Views
Re: I personally see it as more of RJ being a fantastic story teller, but not a well structured
22/02/2011 10:59:25 PM
- 1222 Views
What do you think about the Southern Gothic authors?
23/02/2011 08:08:26 AM
- 1086 Views
Re: What do you think about the Southern Gothic authors?
23/02/2011 10:51:57 AM
- 1183 Views
For the same reason that most people think they have above average intelligence.
21/02/2011 11:13:34 PM
- 1550 Views
Re: For the same reason that most people think they have above average intelligence. *NM*
22/02/2011 02:39:20 PM
- 864 Views
Re: For the same reason that most people think they have above average intelligence.
22/02/2011 02:41:37 PM
- 1024 Views
That's possibly the best explanation of literary criticism I've ever seen.
23/02/2011 02:47:12 AM
- 1139 Views
I can take a shot at that, since nobody else seems willing to.
22/02/2011 07:29:20 AM
- 1590 Views
Re: I can take a shot at that, since nobody else seems willing to.
22/02/2011 11:23:38 PM
- 1244 Views
That has very little to do with anything unless you can provide a real-world analogy to a channeler.
22/02/2011 11:30:52 PM
- 1151 Views
Re: That has very little to do with anything unless you can provide a real-world analogy to a
23/02/2011 12:02:24 AM
- 1196 Views
As far as I'm concerned, the only way to gauge whether an author is good or not is ...
22/02/2011 03:58:17 PM
- 1127 Views
Re: Can someone explain to me how Jordan is not a particularly good writer?
22/02/2011 06:27:11 PM
- 1997 Views
I think it has more to do with limitations imposed by how the story was organized and edited.
22/02/2011 07:50:18 PM
- 1498 Views
That's interesting, and I have a weird agree/disagree here; also, that Adam Roberts sucks
23/02/2011 02:15:12 AM
- 1255 Views
Re: That's interesting, and I have a weird agree/disagree here; also, that Adam Roberts sucks
23/02/2011 11:02:14 AM
- 1223 Views
adam roberts reviews
23/02/2011 03:53:49 AM
- 1223 Views
And I suspect those who prefer the BS books are those who largely read WoT for the story. *NM*
23/02/2011 08:06:16 AM
- 717 Views
Oh GAWD!... not another pointer to Robert Adam's incoherant muckraking
24/02/2011 07:47:35 PM
- 1071 Views
I think DomA answered the question best, but the "do you like it" argument is weak.
22/02/2011 10:32:51 PM
- 1364 Views
Re: I think DomA answered the question best, but the "do you like it" argument is weak.
22/02/2011 11:16:24 PM
- 1318 Views
The Necronomicon isn't actually a book, you know. *NM*
22/02/2011 11:28:29 PM
- 676 Views
There are nine, actually...
23/02/2011 12:04:55 AM
- 1366 Views
Lovecraft's Necronomicon was fictitious. If you want to count fanfiction, fine. *NM*
23/02/2011 12:38:07 AM
- 739 Views
Based on how poorly worded that response was, I'm not sure what to think of it. *NM*
23/02/2011 12:13:00 AM
- 721 Views
I hope I am misunderstanding you.
23/02/2011 10:57:47 PM
- 1066 Views
Re: I hope I am misunderstanding you.
24/02/2011 10:41:09 AM
- 1214 Views
If the core of the story is all that matters, why read a book
24/02/2011 10:32:01 PM
- 1153 Views
Re: If the core of the story is all that matters, why read a book
24/02/2011 11:23:42 PM
- 992 Views
So wait, style is good?
25/02/2011 12:32:07 AM
- 1403 Views
That depends...
23/02/2011 03:00:35 AM
- 1288 Views
I didn't say aesthetics was the primary criterion. I named three criteria.
23/02/2011 05:39:03 AM
- 1160 Views
the "do you like it" is the most important criterion
23/02/2011 10:45:17 PM
- 1154 Views
If you don't mind me asking...
24/02/2011 01:05:12 AM
- 976 Views
I don't mind that you ask, but I'm not going to engage in a defense of literature.
24/02/2011 05:35:27 PM
- 973 Views
Re: I don't mind that you ask, but I'm not going to engage in a defense of literature.
24/02/2011 11:26:55 PM
- 1138 Views
I'm sure you have a wonderful job awaiting in fast food service.
25/02/2011 01:57:15 AM
- 1189 Views
Re: I'm sure you have a wonderful job awaiting in fast food service.
25/02/2011 08:56:06 AM
- 1100 Views
...
25/02/2011 01:07:22 AM
- 1048 Views
It is not a serious question.
25/02/2011 01:53:59 AM
- 1035 Views
Is that so?
25/02/2011 05:58:31 AM
- 1110 Views
I'm not fixated with Jordan.
25/02/2011 03:13:56 PM
- 1131 Views
Then why do you keep trying to qualify the passage in relation to him?
25/02/2011 06:29:31 PM
- 1171 Views
You're conflating two things.
25/02/2011 07:32:59 PM
- 1146 Views
All right, now we're getting somewhere.
26/02/2011 12:40:57 AM
- 1067 Views
Okay, here you go. I am giving you the benefit of the doubt as to your sincerity.
26/02/2011 03:20:44 PM
- 901 Views
Thank you, and I agree with all your explanations. *NM*
26/02/2011 07:28:09 PM
- 688 Views
No, it is a serious question, just one that can never be seriously answered.
25/02/2011 03:28:48 PM
- 1058 Views
Your opinion isn't as valid as anyone else's if that's your opinion.
25/02/2011 04:44:57 PM
- 1218 Views
Re: Your opinion isn't as valid as anyone else's if that's your opinion.
25/02/2011 06:05:18 PM
- 1628 Views
I'm not wasting my time proving something to an internet moron and troll like you.
25/02/2011 07:36:19 PM
- 984 Views
Ah yes, the wonderful "dissmiss the person who disagrees with me by insulting him tactic"
28/02/2011 02:30:35 PM
- 992 Views
Re: Your opinion isn't as valid as anyone else's if that's your opinion.
26/02/2011 11:06:26 AM
- 1035 Views
Re: I find this whole thing elitist and more than a bit silly
23/02/2011 06:45:05 AM
- 1199 Views
Why do you think mind-expanding literature is restricted to the classics?
23/02/2011 08:03:59 AM
- 1032 Views
Re: Why do you think mind-expanding literature is restricted to the classics?
23/02/2011 09:25:10 AM
- 1207 Views
Of course people read for pleasure.
23/02/2011 09:04:24 PM
- 997 Views
Ok...
24/02/2011 08:59:27 AM
- 1033 Views
"Yeah well, that's, like, just your opinion, man." Good argument.
24/02/2011 03:43:24 PM
- 1107 Views
I'm curious to hear who Tom and DomA consider a "very good writer"?
24/02/2011 05:49:13 PM
- 1123 Views
Among living writers?
24/02/2011 08:16:08 PM
- 1158 Views
My list would be similar...
26/02/2011 07:24:11 AM
- 1260 Views
That was a very good list.
26/02/2011 03:07:31 PM
- 1094 Views
Re: That was a very good list.
27/02/2011 04:51:43 AM
- 1149 Views
Oh, and another question
27/02/2011 05:28:47 PM
- 943 Views
Re: Oh, and another question
01/03/2011 03:42:02 AM
- 1096 Views
I think the two of you have taken too narrow a meaning of 'great'
27/02/2011 11:14:30 AM
- 1201 Views
Re: I think the two of you have taken too narrow a meaning of 'great'
28/02/2011 11:51:49 PM
- 1229 Views
Re: I think the two of you have taken too narrow a meaning of 'great'
03/03/2011 12:01:30 AM
- 1135 Views
Re: I think the two of you have taken too narrow a meaning of 'great'
03/03/2011 02:17:06 PM
- 1083 Views
He's a great storyteller, but his prose is somewhat uninspiring. *NM*
27/02/2011 07:28:00 PM
- 761 Views