I'm very sorry if she tipped off anyone about your cunningly concealed herd of cows.

Simon ,'Safe'


We're Literary 2: To Read Makes Our Speaking English Good  

There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."


Consuela - Jul 01, 2004 2:41:31 pm PDT #4019 of 10002
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

I'm a bit lost as to why the opinions expressed about, for instance, Moby Dick means that the Buffistas are, of all things, anti-intellectual.

The dense discussions on the show threads I think are evidence to the contrary. The problem, of course, is that in the show threads we're all discussing the same text, and because we're here, we pretty much all agree that we like it (Allyson notwithstanding *grin*) and are interested in discussing it.

In this thread, there is no one text under discussion for most of the time, except when the latest Harry Potter comes out. That's a structural issue, but it's also a social issue: we are not here to discuss the Western Canon, or the Great Books, or Moby Dick. The lit thread, however pleasant a source of recs and light discussion, isn't the point or even a great draw for members of B.org. It's a side dish.

If this were Readerville, then maybe I'd be more inclined to agree that there were something missing in the discourse here. But it's not.

I like meaty discussion as much as anyone does, but I find myself bristling at the concept that we're anti-intellectual because our discussion doesn't fit Hecubus or Hayden's notions of what it should be. What I've learned from the Kafka/Sartre threads is that there's no way to impose your will on a discussion here, and it's very divisive to try.

You want a discussion about the value of Moby Dick? Start it. And don't get pissed off when people disagree with you about it. Work with what you have.


Jen - Jul 01, 2004 2:42:50 pm PDT #4020 of 10002
love's a dream you enter though I shake and shake and shake you

I never meant to say it did. Which is why I asked if identification precluded analysis.

Gotcha. Missed the "precluded" part.

Although now that I see it, I'm confused by the question. Are you asking, "If I identify with a character, can I no longer analyze it?" or "Can I only analyze if I identify with the character?" Or neither?


brenda m - Jul 01, 2004 2:43:49 pm PDT #4021 of 10002
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

for those of us who love the books and not only don't care why we love them, but actively don't want the visceral love potentially ruined by the cerebral or intellectual dissection.

FWIW, critical discussion has helped me delve further into and really appreciate many more books than the opposite. That's me. I know there's room for me and Deb here, but maybe we do need to do some tinkering.

The more I think about the book club idea, the more I like it. I spent my bus ride home playing with some ideas on how we might do such a thing. OTOH, I don't want to derail the current conversation. Later on tonight perhaps those of us who want to discuss that issue in more detail can try to throw some ideas around?


deborah grabien - Jul 01, 2004 2:44:35 pm PDT #4022 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

To tell you the truth, I'm not sure why you think that my position negates yours

I think because of the presentation that both you and David are giving: I'm finding a sense in there, not that Reader ought to be willing to try and stretch themselves by giving every great book at least one shot (which, whereas I won't do it if the first book I try by an author doesn't talk to me, a la Charles Dickens, whom I detest, I can still think a worthy if somewhat unrealistic ambition), but rather that, if Reader doesn't ignore their gut-take on the book and go with a purely cerebral take on it, he's being anti-intellectual.

That, I completely disagree with. I don't actually like discussing books very much, and generally come in here to see who's reccing what. I don't read books in groups - there's snobbery for you, but really, it comes from the "muHA! I have ALL THE POWER!" gestalt of having lectured classes. I'd rather get the class talking than participate in the discussion. And when it comes to being told why something should work for me, I reach for ordinance. I hate that beyond expression. But that? It's just me, and my take.

And as a writer, with whatever small cred that carries with it, I would just like to say this: anyone who has sat down and written a work of fiction - yes, specifically fiction - has pulled off something mind-boggling. It's incredibly difficult to do, those people, that journey, those roads, that ending, the mechanics, all of it.

So I have to think that damned near any book I pick up has the potential to challenge me. I'm just more likely to allow myself to be challenged if it isn't being force-fed to me, like medicine.

And me out the door - train south in an hour. Interesting discussion, all.


Hayden - Jul 01, 2004 2:46:07 pm PDT #4023 of 10002
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

For me, personally, the encyclopedic wandering of the text was a big part of it.

Yeah, I can see how people of this day & age would like their writing more focused. Most writers believe in economy, and I love economy when it's used well.

I loved the meandering, though. You know while reading it that Melville kept thinking, "Why not just talk about maps here? It'll help the reader to understand the implications of the last few ships they meet." The digressions gave it more of a boozy, conversational feel, I thought, and most of them were funny as hell to boot.


Hil R. - Jul 01, 2004 2:47:21 pm PDT #4024 of 10002
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

That's not much of a reach. We were discussing the canon of Great Books. Not the canon of Great Beach Reads.

All I'm claiming is that "intellectual books" and "canon" are not the same set. They intersect, sure, but they're not the same. Also, for the most part, it looked to me like the discussion of the relevance of canon was more about "who decides what's canon, and how, and what use is a list that no one can agree on and which keeps changing?" than about "what use are the books on that list?"


deborah grabien - Jul 01, 2004 2:47:29 pm PDT #4025 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

I know there's room for me and Deb here, but maybe we do need to do some tinkering.

Heh. Nah. I can always duck out when it goes into long litcrit stuff. If it's covering a book I don't care about, I just skip it anyway; and it's it's doing a book I love, I just back out at warp speed.

SHIT, I'm late.


P.M. Marc - Jul 01, 2004 2:51:28 pm PDT #4026 of 10002
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

Spikefens (I'm carefully using this word to denote the crazy-ass end of the Spike fan spectrum) didn't identify with Spike so much as projected their wants/needs on the character.

Actually, the more I dig, the more I find that there is a lot of identification going on. There are some well-reasoned, even if they're still wrong as a wrong thing, essays on it out there.

And my motive in that may be selfish, because I'd rather read Ple explicate what she's getting out of her Batfamily reading, then simply know she's cluching Nightwing #93 to her chest and rocking back and forth in a rapture of joy.

Deb got to hear me expound for the better part of two hours off and on about why exactly that dramatic arc worked, and how perfect it was, and the art, and the circular, and the.....

Yeah. So, umm. Yeah.

When I have time again, you'll see some, probably. You saw a little bit when I gushed about BoP 68.

Hmm. If my head is still in one piece when I get home, I have thoughts to add. Someone remind me, eh?


DavidS - Jul 01, 2004 2:53:50 pm PDT #4027 of 10002
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

but rather that, if Reader doesn't ignore their gut-take on the book and go with a purely cerebral take on it, he's being anti-intellectual.

Yeah, I don't remember arguing for a purely cerebral take on anything. I haven't mistaken anybody here for a brain in a jar.

You want a discussion about the value of Moby Dick? Start it. And don't get pissed off when people disagree with you about it. Work with what you have.

I'm not pissed about anybody's opinion about Moby Dick. I was annoyed that people dismissed the value of having a critical discussion about it at all. In the middle of an interesting discussion about literary canon. It was (from my perspective) pissing on the fire, extinguishing the discussion. Because if you dismiss out of hand the value of that discussion that's exactly what you're doing.

It was not a matter of people expressing differing opinions about particular books. At all. Frankly, I don't think the people that made the comments that I consider obviously and strongly anti-intellectual would recognize them as such.

But your point about this thread being wide ranging and not focused on the same text is entirely valid, and is also an argument for a reader's club type thread.

Of course, if we all accepted the utility of a canon and agreed on what constituted it (fat chance), we'd all be talking about Ivanhoe already.


Typo Boy - Jul 01, 2004 2:57:48 pm PDT #4028 of 10002
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

Hayden - I think you misunderstood in one thing. I'm not saying the canon is a shibboleth on this thread. (In fact I'm semi-agreeing with you that there has been an over-reaction.) My argument would that IN THE WORLD OF LITCRIT it has been used in just that way. And I guess not only the Canon. I remember being told that my disliking "The English Patient" (the book not the movie) proved my shallowness. Deborah was apparently told the same about Heinlein. And I guarantee you that anyone one who went into litcrit and admitted disliking Shakespeare(sp) would run into this. There definitely is a kind of snobbery out there that breeds a reverse snobbery in reaction. OK, now I know you could argue that the reverse snobbery came first. So I will point out something in U.S. history. As late as the mid 19th century, sailors in a port were observed staging Hamlet for their amusement. Shakespeare only left popular culture for the elite canon in the U.S. from the late 19th century forward. I dimly rember from history something about how it was the Jacksonian era the first greatly widened the gulf in the U.S. between popular and elite culture.