In fact, as I think my other discussions will attest, I like a great deal of "literary" fiction in the larger sense.
I was gonna note, you've spent more than a little of your time in the wilds of literature.
Just for the record, and the sake of clarification: Teppy if you read
Moby Dick
and you hate it you're jake with me. I disagree, but if you put the time in and read the whole damn thing then you're beyond reproach.
Can I just note that (while there are actually interesting arguments to be made for this case) calling literary fiction a genre drives me batfuck.
Hmm. I can see why, but in many (again, mainly modern) cases, I can also see why it becomes easy to genre-ize it.
To name a couple of my favs, I shelve Slammerkin with Possession, mentally. They occupy a specific slot in my head, much the same way as RAH and Asimov are mentally slotted into the sci-fi section. (These slots are not always entirely logical: my collection of pulp fiction is mentally slotted with my collection of vintage pulp true crime, for example.)
In fact, I have my own canon of works which were written in genre and which achieve my standards of literature.
Which is probably what's generally meant by "transcends its genre", an expression I have shockingly few issues with.
Susan W
This is where it helps to not give a damn about classifying them ... why does that matter?
In the interest of accuracy--IIRC, this was deb.
Which is probably what's generally meant by "transcends its genre", an expression I have shockingly few issues with.
I guess - except I don't think you have to transcend the genre to be read as literature. You can be entirely genre, just better written. If James Joyce took every trope of a western and invested all his writing skill into it then I wouldn't say he'd transcended genre.
In the interest of accuracy--IIRC, this was deb.
Yep. Or, I'm sure it wasn't me at least.
(And, FWIW, when I use the term "litfic," I'm referring to its modern incarnation, not the classics.)
Like Carver, and Ann Beattie, and Robert Olen Butler and them?Cause that's what I think of.(I mostly like them, btw.)
For the record (not all relevant to this forum):
- I hate Moby Dick.
- I still like Robert Heinlein.
- I hate romance novels.
- I like identity poems, although so few people do them right.
- I still believe rap is poetry, and the natural evolution of formalism.
- I believe comic books are literature, although so few do them right.
- I hate Madame Bovary.
- I think the "Master of Balantre" is highly underrated.
- I like Jane Austen just fine, thank you.
- I believe that the only reason that Hawthorne is taught in schools today is because there wasn't anything else from that period worth reading.
- I believe it's unfair to compare Clinton's memoirs to U.S. Grant's, as Clinton is still very much alive, and Grant's were dictated on his deathbed, to MARK FRICKIN' TWAIN.
- I think American poetry is plagued by static and basically narcistic ideas about poets' overrated sense of self.
That was cathartic. Kind of a upswell of many conversations around me, both IRL and online.
Like Carver, and Ann Beattie, and Robert Olen Butler and them?
Not familiar with their works.
I liked "Bovary"...It made me a little depressed, but it fit.
Not read Moby Dick...someday, maybe. It's not speaking to me right now.
I don't read much SF, honestly.
Sometimes romances are fun if they are light-hearted or comic.
I like personal poems.
I believe rap is art. I also missed the meeting on appreciating it for the most part.
They're fairly famous litfic short story writers, Susan. I guess they're not who you had in mind, if you don't know who they are.