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Thread: Which author's will live on through history?

  1. #1
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    Which author's will live on through history?

    I was in class the other day, and we started discussing the longevity of our contemporary authors. Given J.M. Coetzee's recent Nobel Prize win and other accomplishments in the literary world, I thought he would at least last for a few more decades. Anyone else have any thoughts?

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    Registered User Tabac's Avatar
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    Live on?

    Those who know how to use the apostrophe.

  3. #3
    Ever Benevolent and Wise
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    Aside from stating the obvious... Aldous Huxley I hope lives on and on in his writings...

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    Re: Live on?

    Quote Originally Posted by Tabac
    Those who know how to use the apostrophe.
    Tabac is one among the happy few who have the luxury of being a flawless intellectual.

    **** civility.

  5. #5
    Grand Equal of Heaven
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    Contrary to Tabac's comment, but not necessarily refuting it, most of the authors that our culture continues to study and value from before the 19th century saw grammar, and to a greater extent spelling as irrelevant to their writings, as the English language was only formalised with set rules in the aforesaid century, or thereabouts (I couldn't say the exact period precisely).

    It's a question that I've been thinking about for a long time, and I always think about it when I read a book or read about an author, whether contemporary or passed, and I wish I knew the secret myself so I could write my own set of modern classics to be studied in the next century onwards. We were talking about it in my English class, and basically it seems an author needs to provide a mixture of mass entertainment, contemporary comment or relevance and universal relevance to live beyond their age in their writing, as well as changing literature as a movement with their writing, or supporting and representing the movement they are apart of that has changed literature.

    I'm being very vague and it is something that could be argued forever, and I try to keep in mind that it isn't very important either. Society will choose which authors are important to it, it's not something that can be forced let alone speculated accurately.
    "Do I dare disturb the universe?"

    - T.S. Eliot

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    You CAN go Home Again Sindhu's Avatar
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    Re: Live on?

    Quote Originally Posted by AbdoRinbo
    Quote Originally Posted by Tabac
    Those who know how to use the apostrophe.
    Tabac is one among the happy few who have the luxury of being a flawless intellectual.

    **** civility.
    AbdoRinbo, I never thought I'd say this, but you just said what I wanted to say the moment I read the post you quote, but was too inhibited to say. It's been niggling at me since then, so, Thanks!
    I'm nobody, who are you?
    Are you nobody too?
    There's a pair of us, don't tell!
    They'd banish us, you know!

    How dreary to be somebody!

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    Not to say that talking about grammar is irrelevant, but I have a hard time seeing any of the contemporary novels of the past 10 years living on as classics 50 years from now. Publishing houses are so concerned with selling power that they ignore literary content--for example, the rise of "chick-lit" But, I could be wrong

  8. #8
    I think that firstly, grammar is greatly over emphasized today, especially by pseudo-intellectuals (or actual intellectuals who are simply the type who enjoy tearing others down) and by the educational systems of most English speaking countries.

    Almost none of today's great authors (if you contend that *any* of today's are) hold doctorates in English literature or the linguistic rules of the language. Most of them present entertaining ideas, and their publishing houses are the ones who correct minor grammatical errors. Sometimes the intentional breaking of "commonly accepted grammatical rules" is simply necessary to craft an intelligent sounding sentence. The rule prohibiting the cessation of a sentence with a preposition is one that has been ridiculed by many authors and of course, Winston Churchill. Also, beginning a sentence with a conjuction is something that is at times simply more pleasing "aesthetically" as opposed to crafting a sentence around *not* beginning with a conjunction.

    Grammar cannot be completely ignored, if it were then only the writer would understand exactly what message was being conveyed. However, as much as you can create a science out of the English language, do not forget that to convey a story or a strong emotion you cannot be constrained by the bounds of scientific laws and rules.

    Of today's authors I cannot think of one which I can see being remembered fifty years from now. I think the problem is, most especially in the fiction genre, is that fiction has been too compartmentalized and cheapened.

    Basically when it comes to fiction you have: mystery, science fiction, fantasy, romance, et al. Anytime an author intends to create any sort of work these days they simply try to copy the "norm" in whatever genre they intend to write. This has had the result of lots of moderately talented authors pumping out cheap dime novels that have completely deluded the fiction market.

    Gone are the days when fictional autobiographies such as David Copperfield or adventure novels like Treasure Island will be appreciated by the masses.

    When it comes to other forms of writing though, I think we have some modern authors who may live on for many years after their own demise. Especially in the history and political science departments. These are forms of writing in which you do not have to be creative in the same way as you must in literature (that is if you are using a more constrained definition of the word.)

    I think that Henry Kissinger has produced several treatises that will live on many years from now, and David McCullough in the history department.

    When it comes to literary works along the lines of those we saw from the early 20th century I do not thing our society will produce any replicas in the near future.
    When a man says he approves of something in principle, it means he hasn't the slightest intention of putting it into practice.

    Otto Von Bismark

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    Entertaining, capturing and inspiring soul teaser

    <edited>

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    Right in the happy button IWilKikU's Avatar
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    yeah the apostrophe is pretty cool, but what I hate is the friggin semi-colon!!!!

    ;;;;;;;; ARGH!!! Really the only think its good for is winking
    ...Also baby duck hat would be good for parties.

  11. #11
    Right in the happy button IWilKikU's Avatar
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    and not even that anymore with these darn emoticons!
    ...Also baby duck hat would be good for parties.

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    Otto von Bismark gives me a wonderful literature class

    some paragraph is not easy to me and i have to reread them

  13. #13
    basically it seems an author needs to provide a mixture of mass entertainment, contemporary comment or relevance and universal relevance to live beyond their age in their writing,
    I think that that is an important thing to consider. Many of what we consider to be classic novels had important political comments that had universal relevance (1984, Brave new world, etc). Can you think of many books that are like that today? I think there are many books which have an entertainment value that is superior to most classics I have read, yet they have no real commentaries on society or politics. That's not to say that they don't stimulate the mind or anything like that, but it definitely does seem that for a book to be studied in years to come, it has to have some sort of commentary that scholars can dissect and write essays about. Like the Lord of the Flies, 1984, or A Brave New World. You don't see HP Lovecraft being taught in class, though his stories are some of the most imaginative that I've read, and that's because he didn't make political/cultural commentary.

    Still, if I was teaching a class in the future, I would definitely include some authors of today. Neil Gaiman's "American Gods" and "Neverwhere", and Alan Moore's "The Watchmen" would be on that list (particularly the watchmen, as it does have a lot of political, cultural, and most importantly philosophical comments).

    I also agree with Otto that in non-fiction we do have a lot of good works to pass on to the next generations. Stephen Hawking should probably be added to that list 8) and HP Lovecraft wrote some pretty insightful letters that could be considered great nonfiction, but basically no one will ever read them :P

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    Lolita is a book built on groups of magic words. Although the author insisted on the meaninglessness of his writing, only inventing some beautiful sentences, it dose create wonderful impression on readers, even people who read other version feel strong influence.
    As to whether Lolita is really meaningless, every one entertains his own opinion. However, as far as I know few people could master language as Nabokov does. I haven’t read Lolita’s original version which is too hard to a foreigner. I want to know the opinion of those who compared the way of Nabokov to that of modern grammatical enthusiasts. What I believe, if you could play the language like the author of Lolita, we could almost ignore the meaning covered by the words. The structure and the rhetoric and the puns and loading of fancy phrase substitute for commentaries on societies and human beings. Is this pure art unworthy of being praised? If there is a contemporary author whose interest is on words building to extreme degree, I think his art will have great longevity. In short, art can live without meaning.


    Secondly, whether grammatical rule is obstruct which limits authors to express freely? Actually, there are some people who find the gap between the language and the other shore, like Lacan. But so unfortunately, the limitation of language seems to become a such stereotype excuse that every moderately talented authors can turn to and make the abuse of language reasonable.

    Thirdly, the reason why the writers of writing history and science will live on longer probably is that almost everyone is able to pump out cheap dime novel through his poor life experience but the fewer has enough talent to create science and historical events without really rich knowledge.



    :P
    excuse me to steal some phrase from your posts, i'm a language learner.

  15. #15

    Re: Live on?

    Quote Originally Posted by Tabac
    Those who know how to use the apostrophe.
    Amen, brother.

    Contrary to the many assertions to the contrary in this topic-hopping thread, grammar is indeed an important element of writing and shouldn't be ignored in the slightest. There are a formal set of techniques one must master before deviating from them, else the rationale for the break as well as its force are lost. Those who point to Picasso's primistivist paintings, for example, shouldn't overlook the fact that the man knew how to draw anatomically perfect humans.

    It's become ever so fashionable to wag fingers at the pedant and say that grammatical rules are merely standardised forms of the arbitrary, holdovers from a previous century, etc, etc, and furthermore Yeats' spelling was atrocious, etc, etc ... and what it amounts to is a lot of more-egalitarian-than-thou rubbish. Tabac claimed to be neither perfect nor a smug intellectual: he merely made a wry remark about punctuation. We need more linguistic policemen (not in terms of censorship, of course; don't misinterpret me) like him to uphold certain standards and prevent students from unwittingly perpetuating mistakes or falling into "anything goes" mindset. I doubt very much that Vronaqueen was trying to make a radical artistic statement with that egregious possessive/plural error.

    Now, the subject was about contemporary writers, wasn't it?

    I do think that some contemporary fiction will survive the ravages of time and fashion, though not by the authors who are most visible. Eggers? He'll vanish, most likely in Foster Wallace's shadow. Coetzee? That's debatable. Sebald's work will live on. So will Andrei Makine's, William Boyd's and perhaps Alessandro Baricco's. No, I haven't yet spotted a Konrad, Bellow, Dickens, Borges, Proust or Nabokov among this (my) generation, but I'm hopeful in spite of the same push toward commercialisation and compartmentalisation that so worries our Prussian dictator friend. Still, we have no idea which obscure writer the academics will exhume in a century's time and say, "Alas, they hardly knew ye!"
    Sybarite: An independent journal of literature, criticism and image. Queries to [email protected]

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