The Wheel of Time's Great Themes, Edited to Include Those I See.
The Name With No Man Send a noteboard - 06/12/2009 05:58:08 AM
Among scholars, students of literature are unusual in that their field is centuries old yet still not precisely defined by anyone. However, all agree great literature is more than just engaging writing. It has profundity and substance, communicates something important to the reader, not just todays reader, but readers 500 years from now. I'll post my own suggestions in a response below because I want everyone else's thoughts as well, uninfluenced by my own (indeed, two people have already noted "subthemes" that completely escaped me.)
At least half a dozen examples come easily to mind in TWoT though. I won't call it great literature because, though the definition remains vague, literature is more than just a didactic exercise. Certainly there's plenty of room between mindless pulp fiction and a literary opus, and far be it from me to say where in that spectrum WoT lies. I do think it unquestionable though that Jordan does more than spin a good yarn: He not only has something to say, but something worth hearing, something worth sharing, so I invite everyone to share what examples of that each of us sees.
There, with a minute to spare.
At least half a dozen examples come easily to mind in TWoT though. I won't call it great literature because, though the definition remains vague, literature is more than just a didactic exercise. Certainly there's plenty of room between mindless pulp fiction and a literary opus, and far be it from me to say where in that spectrum WoT lies. I do think it unquestionable though that Jordan does more than spin a good yarn: He not only has something to say, but something worth hearing, something worth sharing, so I invite everyone to share what examples of that each of us sees.
There, with a minute to spare.
This message last edited by The Name With No Man on 06/12/2009 at 09:37:35 AM
The Wheel of Time's Great Themes, Edited to Include Those I See.
06/12/2009 05:58:08 AM
- 876 Views
So, What Are They?
06/12/2009 09:36:56 AM
- 611 Views
Putting names into a blender isn't the same as weaving together great themes.
06/12/2009 03:17:05 PM
- 539 Views
No, Indeed It Is Not.
06/12/2009 04:37:23 PM
- 432 Views
Oh my God...trying to use agape in context of this series is overkill to the nth degree.
07/12/2009 04:12:56 AM
- 452 Views
Jordan May Not Always Execute It Well, But I Believe It's There (Now We Face Details in TGS.)
07/12/2009 04:28:05 PM
- 641 Views
Read what Larry's Short History of Fantasy says about Jordan.
07/12/2009 05:56:03 PM
- 526 Views
I Have to Agree With Fionwe's View the Characters Are Deeper.
08/12/2009 04:19:07 PM
- 505 Views
I'm done with this thread.
08/12/2009 06:21:41 PM
- 431 Views
Fair Enough.
08/12/2009 07:02:04 PM
- 786 Views
If it were just about Jordan I could ignore this last ridiculous comment.
09/12/2009 03:56:47 PM
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Louis La'mour said about himself he wasn't an author so much as a storyteller...
06/12/2009 03:41:09 PM
- 476 Views
Ha. Funny, I feel the same way, and come to the opposite conclusion.
08/12/2009 08:42:41 AM
- 439 Views
I've never been able to finish the Lord of the Rings Trilogy. Too boring, with fairy tale characters
09/12/2009 12:28:26 PM
- 399 Views
That Is a Great Shame.
09/12/2009 01:27:44 PM
- 394 Views
I enjoyed the Silmarrilion though...the part about the Valar and their comparative strengths...
09/12/2009 01:39:47 PM
- 384 Views
That's.. too bad, I guess?
09/12/2009 08:40:49 PM
- 387 Views
Seems to me you've inverted it.
08/12/2009 08:48:07 AM
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One Way or the Other Their WoT Origin Must Be the Stories We Know (Slight Spoiler Alert.)
08/12/2009 03:18:30 PM
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I don't really see any "great" themes per se, just an enjoyable story, like the pulp serials.
07/12/2009 03:32:43 PM
- 429 Views
I Think He Set Out to Write Epic Fantasy, Yes.
08/12/2009 04:25:36 PM
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