What is the genre of Frank? Science fiction or horror,
anyways , the canon ignore genres. Works who enter there can be from any genre, even becaause is millenar and those genres have a few centuries only.
What is the genre of Frank? Science fiction or horror,
anyways , the canon ignore genres. Works who enter there can be from any genre, even becaause is millenar and those genres have a few centuries only.
Oh, okay. I thought you meant genre fiction didn't get into the canon.
And, I'd say, personally, I'd consider Frankenstein 60% Horror, 40% sci-fi, lol.
My opinion is Frankenstein is science fiction, Dracula is horror. Horror deals with the supernatural. There may be elements of horror in Frankenstein but looking at it objectively, it is science fiction.
Dostoevsky gives me more than any scientist.
Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world. - Albert Einstein
In 1965 (he actually died in December of that year) W. Somerset Maugham was feted as, variously, "The most famous living Englishman" and "the most famous writer in the world". Oh the blank faces I see now when I cite Somerset Maugham as my favourite writer.
I actually think JK Rowling could easily be a "who?" in 20 years time.
Ivor Randle
author of The Middle Prince
Available now on Amazon Kindle for all e-readers
Well said. I think I'll add another thought piggybacking on that: Who's to say Shakespeare won't be forgotten in a century or two? Seems unikely now, but with things shifting more and more toward TV and movies with the incoming generations, I think it's perfectly possible for the great writers to be remembered, if at all, by the movies based upon their works, and not their actual works. And of course, movies are rarely as good as the stories they're based on.
If we find the answer, it would be the ultimate triumph of human reason-- for we would know the mind of God.
-Stephen Hawking
Last edited by Drkshadow03; 02-19-2011 at 05:58 PM.
"You understand well enough what slavery is, but freedom you have never experienced, so you do not know if it tastes sweet or bitter. If you ever did come to experience it, you would advise us to fight for it not with spears only, but with axes too." - Herodotus
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Shakespeare was famous (in London and his home town) in his day, but it was over a hundred years after his death that he got a memorial in Poets' Corner at Westminster Abbey. He was basically rediscovered when a revitalised theatre industry needed material that fitted all sorts of political and cultural criteria at the time.
As you rightly say, he can submerge again, particularly under the mass of material now available.
Ivor Randle
author of The Middle Prince
Available now on Amazon Kindle for all e-readers
Borges, someone which knowledge and understanding of literature was not ridiculous suggested that Shakespeare, Voltaire, etc will be forgotten and only religious and philosophical texts remembered, because they are the true great ideas.