Quote:
Originally Posted by
JCamilo
But those are just the place where the work is printed. It does not tell me anything about the work itself. If I print and sell Shakespeare in cheap and popular editions he ceases to be?
Of course it says something about the work! To quote Marshall McLuhan, "The medium is the message". If a publisher isn't going to put any effort into the appearance of his or her product, because a book is after all a product), obviously it's not worth it. Despite the cliche, there is something to be said for judging a book by its cover. Having "Harlequin Romance" on the cover definitely tells me something.
Quote:
Ironic, isnt Ironic better?
Maybe just this once:)
Quote:
Why not? I mean, Daniel Dafoe was a journalist and wrote a piece about a plague (that he never saw, but anyways) and it is literature. We have some arguments for great masterworks who are absolutelly banal - Tchekhov have a short story about puppies who are born and how happy the kids were. He do have a short piece about a guy who was arrested by stealing stuff from trainlines... Some great writers just wrote journey diaries...
This point is harder for me to contest because I'm not familiar with the pieces you mention, as far as I know. I feel like these are something I'd have to read before I can discredit them or your theory behind them.
Quote:
Good literature transcends generation. You will find that among Dante peers there were poets who we forgot. And who said newspapers have no such effect? That is like saying History does not do the same, since Journalism is pretty much the diary register of History. Wouldn't Truman Capote be transcendetal ? Or the guys who discovered Nixon?
I think there's a difference between Journalism and newspaper headings. Within one section of a newspaper one can easily distinguish between:
An informative story
-a car crashed here
-4 cars were involved
-it was the blue car's fault
-the highway will be closed until tuesday
-one person was killed and
A jounalistic piece
-something along the lines of Capote's work, where perspective plays a huge role, amongst other things
This is where we document history, not in the shock value goings on of most headlines. So yes, I can agree with you that Literature can be found here.
Quote:
Several meetings that Dante had were among people who, without knowing the life of Dante, we have no idea who they were. Our current society cannt understand it at all, so parts of Divine Comedy would cease to be literature?
I don't understand you, here. I'm not sure how this is relevant. Please clarify :)
Quote:
Plus there is a mistake, understandment does not define literature. People still do not understand Kafka, Joyce, Dante, etc that well. Some forms of literature, such alegories, are meant to be hard to understand.
I never said that understanding defines literature. I said that interpretation of and connection to a message defines literature, as well as its transcendental nature.
Quote:
Because Shakespeare wrote some crap plays. They still literature, as they are a product of the same techniques, will (no pun) and techniques of Hamlet. He just failed in input quality here. And when you classify romance novels, you forgot that once Madame Bovary was such pink girly low class romance novel. That Moby Dick was mumble jumble, Poe vulgarity cheap tales, Lolita could be porn... Some people may consider that as not literature, but I can just imagine: If you think there is good literature, you must remember something to be good must be superior to something worst. Otherwise we are all plainly leveled. You may say: They are superior of the almost good like Dumas or Stoker. And why not to Stephen King and Tolkien as well ? Why not Clive Baker or Margaret Weiss? Because you determine them to be bad... bad what? Books? Then....
I'll agree with you on that! Shakespeare did write some crap plays, and yes, I concede that they are considered literature. I suppose they have been grouped in because their author wrote so many works that are worth reading. Are those plays still being studied? If so, there must be something there! But- are you saying that Hamlet is crap? Of that I can't agree! I was thinking more of some of the minor plays that have not been read by a single person I've come across.
As for your argument about Madame Bovary, I suppose those who considered it pink and fluffy were missing something that further generations found useful- her ability to transcend time won out. If a Harlequin romance novel ever comes to be considered Literature universally, I'll eat my words. :D
And of course, as for the other authors you mentioned, personal opinion is going to play into it. There may be people who consider Lolita pornographic (in a negative sense- I don't want to get into arguments about porn), but the majority has seen value and merit in it, and therefore its status stands. As for the other authors you mention- I do not say that there is literature, and what does not fall into this category is not worth reading. There is an in between, I suppose, and into that falls a good quality story that we may carry on for generations that doesn't carry a message? I don't know, you've got me thinking on this one!:D
Quote:
As I said I am sure they would love to have J.K.Rowling here, but their lawyer probally told them to be a bad idea. As I understand, when an author is in public domain and they have english material, they add the author. It was not a judgment of merit but a pratical one.
Of this, I have no idea, J.
Quote:
I am sure everyone does, altough the hard thing is to demand to find the quality basead on popularity. I would say Neil Gaiman have qualities that classic authors do have, but he does not spawn controversial threads here. It is crime labeling a few popular authors as bad...
I'm not familiar with Neil Gaiman either. I'm thinking now that I'm not well-enough read for this argument. :sick:
No, quality is not solely based on popularity. It's a bunch of things that I'm tired of typing haha. Yes, I agree with you that instantly labeling popular authors is bad is a crime. They have more important tests to endure before one can label them as bad or not literary.
Quote:
Ok, opinions are meant to be argued... that is I am being Ironic? Anyways CC, J is short (pun now!) :)
Yes, they are indeed. Haha, well J, I do love a good pun.