You again put words in my mouth. I essentially said that one should separate good litterature and bad literature, and not national literature, or linguistically limited literature. Neither of those authors were linguistically limited. Shakespeare created what he did not have. You are acting (I think) just as ethnocentric as the English people, but are pushing your native works passed their limits instead of the traditional canon. You are, in affect (this is according to my opinion, I mean no personal offense), negating your own argument by proposing we, instead of read our (as you would make us believe) self-superior English work, should read the works wish you deem to be self-superior Portuguese/Brazilian works.
I mentioned nothing about South America so now you play on a stereotype, as if to make me seem like an uncultured, untraveled, unknowing, stupid American (which is false since I am an Israeli Canadian) and that I have never read a book outside of my native English, which is also false, considering I was raised on Hebrew, or that my sense of taste is limited to Hollywood movies, which is a stretch, seeing as I have not mentioned any movies, and you are just assuming I go see them because of my ethnicity.
Yes, you are right; art depends on the point of view, the taste. Some people just happen to have a sense of taste, meanwhile others just wave their pom-pons trying to shout "hey look at me! I think 3000 years of literature is stupid since it all only comes down to personal taste."
Out with Faulkner in with Coelho? Is that how this world should go? Seriously, there is something to be said of someone saying on one hand people are ignorant, and on the other that they have the sense to distinguish between aesthetically achieving art and mediocrity.


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function; it *really* helps to make it clear who you are addressing.



When the cinema started they didn't had techniques of script writing as today, neither professinals for this. So, they went where they could have similar material to make the movies to supply the shortage of creation, and it was theatre. Who was ALREADY the most popular playwriter? Shakespeare. So, he was adapted, some of his stories, even before Hollywood industry was raised.
Mark Twain, Faulkner, Poe, Emily Dickinson, Walt Whitman, Hawthorne, Melville are all less famous than Shakespeare. (And you still think it is a matter of fame, ew) and they are north-americans. No english writer have Shakespeare popularity. The only kind of writers who share his influence (because it is not popularity, since I do not care if people actually read them, as long Art keep reading them, because Immortality is for a few chosen) wrote in Greek, Latim and Italian. French was the popular language until XIX century and no Villon, Voltaire, Pascal, Baudelaire, Hugo, Balzac ever managed to have Shakespearean influence (quite the contrary, Shakespeare is a shadow over them).
