Can we maybe vote on the whole murdering people issue?

Wash ,'Serenity'


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."


juliana - Jul 02, 2004 6:07:34 am PDT #4145 of 10002
I’d be lying if I didn’t say that I miss them all tonight…

I was thinking about starting an Ulysses wiki, to annotate the book (factually, not like "this is Joyce using metaphor) communally. Interested?

As stated before, not a Joyce or Ulysses fan, but interested. I'm a fact and history geek.


Calli - Jul 02, 2004 6:08:41 am PDT #4146 of 10002
I must obey the inscrutable exhortations of my soul—Calvin and Hobbs

I'm in a book group that's been meeting fairly regularly since 1994. I don't know if our setup would be useful online, but if anyone's interested, here's how we work it.

1) Each person in the group can suggest a book. The suggestions are written down on a list and three are chosen for the next three months. (That lets people work stuff around their schedules, without nailing down, say, a whole year.)

2) The books on the list have to have been read by at least one person in the group. ("Well, I hear it's really good," has only brought us sorrow the few times we tried it.)

3) The book needs to be available in the library and/or in paperback, because most of us can't drop $30 on a hardcover book each month.

4) The type of book -- non-fiction, sf, canonically blessed classic, mystery, young adult fic, etc. -- varies, so everyone gets a chance to try something new or, alternately, only has to try the sort of book they hate once in a while.

5) When the meeting day arrives, everyone can talk about all aspects of the book. Like it? Hate it? Whatever, so long as you respect other's opinions. And when that day arrives, if we haven't read the book we assume that we'll be spoiled, 'cause the whole point of the group is to talk about the book.

There are other rules related to the type of book group I'm in (feminist, strongly inclined toward female writers and/or protagonists) that wouldn't be relevant. But items 1-5 have worked well for us. I have no idea if I'd participate in a book group thread if we do have one, but I thought I'd throw the above out. If useful, great, if not, yay scrollbar.

For those who are wondering, our next three books are, Money to Burn, by K. Munger, Emma by J. Austen, and The Fifth Sacred Thing by Starhawk.


Nutty - Jul 02, 2004 6:13:58 am PDT #4147 of 10002
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

Note to world: hating a "great work" is a sign that hater actually read it. World has my permission to hang up by their toenails any and all who dismiss a work unread; but those who dismiss a work in the fulness of information -- those are people expressing an opinion. An opinion that may be 100% wrongheaded and in disagreement with me, but legitimate response nonetheless.

On the identification front, I find that having an emotional connection to a book is what makes it alive, for me. It's why books matter, don't you think? Not Reader-Mary-Sue ID, but This Struggle Is Still Relevant ID. (For example, I'm told that Austen books are wildly popular in India, because they dramatize the very current problem, in India, of marrying for your family's sake, or for love, or both.) People see parts of themselves in the characters and in what actions and mistakes the characters make, and say Yes, I know you in all your messiness. Isn't that valuable? Isn't that a way of seeing into other people's lives?

On some thought, I think my version of "identification" is identifying with a problem, and not just with a character. I don't cry for Laura Bounderby in Hard Times because I love her; I cry for her because she has a long dark teatime of the soul, and doesn't know what to do, and strikes out in lonely, frightened blindness and finds her father's heart. That sudden, mournful rapprochement -- it was the culmination of Dickens's thesis about "scientific" instruction being cruel and empty.

Most of the critical thinking people have talked about wanting is the kind that springs from that visceral place; it just goes beyond the love of the work itself to wanting to eat the author's spicy brain

Which JZ said much more succinctly, and with the phrase "spicy brains".

My main reaction to that was "OK, I guess you could read it that way. Or maybe that's just the color of walls in a building that age."

I think a good example of this is the scene in Innocence, where Buffy is looking for Angel, and goes to his house and finds him shirtless and he rips her emotions to shreds. Now, I don't know Joss personally. But listening to his commentary, he is 100% right that that emotional scene happening with one of the characters half-naked, in a private space, has a hugely different impact from having it take place outside with all in woolly coats. I don't know that it says something about him personally, but it does say Here are the choices I made, as author, and here is the outcome of those choices.

So a lot of modern litcrit is subjective, then? Many of the pronouncements I've seen have tended heavily toward objective, received truth.

The tone is a product of how criticism is "supposed to be written" -- i.e. that you're proving something, presenting a coherent case to the jury of your peers. (They don't have to buy it.) But I don't think litcrit is all subjective, so much as ... like looking at inkblots and saying why you think they're all scary evil bugs or dancing clowns or whatever. There's a certain element of "that's how it looks to me", but it ultimately has to be grounded in evidence from the text. That evidence can be totally contradictory, or ambiguous, or even unintentional on the author's part, but if you can point to a line that backs up your interpretation, you've found something valid. (Just not the only thing valid in that text.)

I'll agree with those who find the "you're being unintellectual" camp kind of didactic and insulting. I do think of myself as an intellectual, and I loathe being tarred with as indiscriminate a brush as I'm being accused of using on literature. If one is going to call me on being reductive or dismissive or crude, it sort of behooves one to not use the same tactics in one's objection!


Michele T. - Jul 02, 2004 6:16:22 am PDT #4148 of 10002
with a gleam in my eye, and an almost airtight alibi

What I personally disliked about the tone of hayden, Hec, and Michele's posts was the air of "you people are doing it wrong, sit down and listen while I explain it to you."

If you see that in my posts, you're putting it there yourself. As is Steph, who called me rude without further comment.

If someone wants to say nothing more about Pride and Prejudice than "DARCY! OMG WOOBIE! FLAIL!!!!" that's fine by me. But, as David and hayden both pointed out, when any attempts to have a discussion that engages both the heart and the mind get shut down, when the standard response to, say, Ulysses is, "hated it, boring, next?" then it's more than fair for someone to come in and say "this community is actively hostile to the way I read, and I don't like it."

And as to the Music thread -- anyone who's missed the big love in there for, among other things, Justified, "Toxic," and other radio-friendly unit shifters hasn't been paying attention. Hell, this whole morning has been about the Beatles.

I could go into a whole rant about the self-defeating foolishness of of getting defensive around people who have more deep knowledge of a topic than you do rather than trying to exchange knowledge with them as equals in the way a forum like this allows you to, but really, fuck it. I have more useful things to do.


Dana - Jul 02, 2004 6:20:40 am PDT #4149 of 10002
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

Yeah, no tone of superiority there.


Fred Pete - Jul 02, 2004 6:22:36 am PDT #4150 of 10002
Ann, that's a ferret.

World has my permission to hang up by their toenails any and all who dismiss a work unread

I'm not sure how far I'd go with this. It's perfectly legit not to read, say, the Harry Potter novels because of a lack of interest in fantasy. What would irk me is if such a person called the HP novels "crap" instead of "not my sort of thing."


Steph L. - Jul 02, 2004 6:24:54 am PDT #4151 of 10002
I look more rad than Lutheranism

As is Steph, who called me rude without further comment.

What further comment do you want? Here's the statement that I called rude:

I do not, as my homies say, see myself represented within the discursive community formed here, and both the self-congratulation and the reverse snobbery tend to actively repel me.

Further comment: "self-congratulation," "reverse snobbery," and "repel" are being used to describe a thread in which I participate. I find those terms to be rude, because I can't put a positive spin on those terms.

when the standard response to, say, Ulysses is, "hated it, boring, next?" then it's more than fair for someone to come in and say "this community is actively hostile to the way I read, and I don't like it."

Can someone say "hated it, boring"? Is expressing a negative opinion about a book that you want to discuss in depth automatically an attempt to hijack the thread into moving on and discussing Sidney Sheldon?


Hil R. - Jul 02, 2004 6:26:17 am PDT #4152 of 10002
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

A good way to create appreciation of Shakespeare's comedies might be to begin with, "Shakespeare wrote the way people talked then. He used a lot of current slang. So if something sounds dirty, he very well may have intended it that way." Problem is, school boards aren't going to take that attitude very well.

This is exactly how my junior and senior year English teachers in high school taught it. One of my friends and I ended up flinging Shakespearean insults at each other for most of senior year. (Of course, my freshman year English teacher took the "This is the right way to interpret this story" approach. But my response was, "You're an idiot." Which I never did say to her face in exactly those words, but got pretty close a few times.)


Steph L. - Jul 02, 2004 6:27:19 am PDT #4153 of 10002
I look more rad than Lutheranism

What would irk me is if such a person called the HP novels "crap" instead of "not my sort of thing."

What would irk me is if that person said, in the middle of a Harry Potter discussion "I hate those books! Let's talk about Lemony Snicket!" Because that's a deliberate attempt to de-rail.

But, honestly. I don't want to deconstruct a book -- Great Book or otherwise -- that I didn't enjoy. I don't mind other people deconstructing it, but this isn't college, and therefore I don't *have* to discuss a book I don't like.


Jessica - Jul 02, 2004 6:28:52 am PDT #4154 of 10002
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

What would irk me is if such a person called the HP novels "crap" instead of "not my sort of thing."

So, to take that back to the discussion of canon, what makes it okay to say "No thanks, I don't like fantasy" and not okay to say "No thanks, I don't like whaling?" Why is one percieved as an expression of individual taste and the other percieved as a hostile attack on intellectualism?

(Note that I'm only using Moby Dick as an example because it's the book that started all this. I have no feelings or opinions about the book one way or another.)