This is topic Interesting Article about SF/F literature and film in forum Open Discussions About Writing at Hatrack River Writers Workshop.


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Posted by Balthasar (Member # 5399) on :
 
Here's an article that everyone around here should find interesting.

www.spiked-online.com/articles/0000000CA436.htm
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
What if we don't find it interesting?

Seriously, though, I think that there is some danger of putting the cart before the horse. You know that I believe that the problems the modern world will face in the coming few decades are insoluable to human minds. I may think that humans are pretty low on the totem pole when it comes to intelligence, but I don't think they're universally too stupid to notice that they've gotten in over their heads.

People are noticing that the live they live in is a hell of a lot more fragile than the planet they live on...and they're choosing not to live in that world anymore.

Commonsense, really, sure, I'm escapist, but that's because I've realized that survival depends on it.
 


Posted by Kolona (Member # 1438) on :
 
I dunno. The principle may be somewhat valid, but I don't see SF/fantasy as unique among all the fictions for escapism. As a die-hard Nancy Drew fan who devoured those books in my pre-teen years, I think any fiction will suffice. My word, the Romance shelves seem to beat SF/fantasy in sheer volume(s) .
 
Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Gahg! Bodice rippers
 
Posted by Jules (Member # 1658) on :
 
I don't know how to treat a journalist seriously who describes Doctor Who as "Britain's greatest ever science fiction series."

I mean, it was appalling. It should stay dead. The only good thing to come of it was that Douglas Adams was able to recycle some of his scripts for it into the first Dirk Gently book...

Especially when she admits at the bottom to having attended a Blake's 7 conference. Now she doesn't even have the excuse of ignorance :-)

 


Posted by Christine (Member # 1646) on :
 
I had to let that one sit for a while...

She seems to blame the internet more heavily than scifi/fantasy for the escapism. Trouble is, she's wrong. People have stopped making face-to-face contact with other humans on a regular basis ever since the advent of television. Talk about an escape! The biggest human contact there is arguing with your husband/kids/sibling about what you get to watch!

But seriously, I think eople have been looking for ways to escape the monotony of their lives for a long time. We've just found better ways to do it now. Has anyone ever read a romance novel around here? Even the good ones? Oh PUH-LEASE! Romance is more escapist than scifi any day of the week...the concept of the tall, dark, handsome stranger who will sweep you off your feet is as old as time. (The physical description might have changed a bit...)

My mom chooses to escape through mystery novels. She gets to help the protagonist find out whodunit. My father reads history. He's escapging then too by stepping into the minds and decisions of great leaders who actually did have the means to influence our society and shape our world. My brother reads philosophy....'nuff said.

And I choose the ultimate form of escape...writing! No one else's worlds are good enough for me, I have to make up my own. Doesn't matter if I get published or not...the act of writing is an escape. And you know what, I know it and I don't even care. When I stop to think about the real world too much I become overly stressed because I really have no control over anything. I barely have control over what I specifically do with my own life and who I associate with....and most of those choices are behind me and can't be changed any longer. (like my choice to get married) Then let's not even go into the lack of choice I have about how much money the government takes from me etc.

So yes, I escape. And you know what? When I surface from my hole to spent time with family and friends, I usually play games. This, too, is a way of escaping, one used for as long as there have been humans! This weekend I'll be starting a new role playing campagaign...escaping! The more positive thing about these escapes is that it still forces me to asociate with real, live humans.

And here's a truism that we cannot ignore. Humans need human contact, it's part of what makes us human. Some people are choosing to get that contact over the internet, which I think is feeble if it's your only means of support, but I know very few whose ONLY means of support is over the internet. Most of the time I notice that the other faceless nics on a site mention family and friends that they asociate with outside the chat room or forum.

I'm going to stop now because I have issues with posts that are too long.
 


Posted by EricJamesStone (Member # 1681) on :
 
Nice to see I'm not the only one around here to appreciate Blake's 7.
 
Posted by teddyrux (Member # 1595) on :
 
All forms of fiction, and entertainment in general (but that's for another topic) are escapism.
People went to see Shakespeare to escape from their daily lives. Peolple went to the Colosseum to escape. Even the Mongol hordes of Ghengis Kahn had a story teller.
There have always been some form of fiction that was considered beneath the ogher forms. Unfortunately Sci/Fi and Fantasy are the current red headed stepchild of modern fiction. Fortunately, this hasn't dissuaded me from writing. :}
 


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