Fri 2 May 2008
Curiouser and curiouser…
Posted by jtshea under Uncategorized , authors , creativity , crossover , digital media , literature dept. , teachingWith thanks to the glorious Mr. Lewis Carroll, and in recognition perhaps of a renaissance in Carroll-ish strands within literary science fiction and fantasy, I point tonight to the marvelous blog post at the UK’s Guardian books site by 2008 Clarionite Damien G. Walter. Damien, along with classmate Emily Jiang, is a respondent to this blog, something that the new blog etiquette requires me to disclose; their equally stunning classmates so far seem less forward (less interested perhaps?) as they prep for the crazed six-week phenomenon that is Clarion.
Damien’s blog post heralds the excitement of the Mundane movement — a rather joyous dichotomy, this idea of a wondrous Mundane. I won’t try to summarize the piece, because it makes its own case so well. What strikes me as wondrous about the post is the simple fact that the Mundane movement, for all its power, is but one of several tremendously important strands emerging from the literatures of science fiction and fantasy. Whether you choose to focus on Geoff Ryman and the Mundane as Damien does, or Kelly Link and magical realism, or Jeff VanderMeer and the New Wierd, or Neil Gaiman and the intersticial storytelling that bridges between graphic novels, novels, young adult novels and film, and then back again, the world of science fiction and fantasy literatures is becoming as varied and exciting as the field of ‘Literatures in Spanish’ that replace the old Western-centric approach differentiating between Spanish literature and the novels of the so-called New World; or ‘Literatures in English’ that brings English (UK) Literature, American Literature and Caribbean literature in English together into a single topic.
Damien’s piece announces the death of the starship and the birth of the mundane reality at the core of sf and fantasy. (Okay, that’s a gross exaggeration, but I’m trying to make a point here.) I would argue that the starship, in partnership with the vampire and comic heroes such as Iron Man, live on and indeed reign supreme in the other media that reflect the sf and fantasy genres: film, television, the web. They will continue to dominate in those genres well into the future, since the emerging ‘Literatures of SF/Fantasy’ have more power in the written word than in other media.
Meantime, where our past focus in the study of literature writ large was framed largely by the dichotomy between ‘High’ and ‘Low’ literatures, the emergence of so many powerful variants within sf and fantasy may herald a new age. Where it goes, well, only time will tell. Or time travel.
May 3rd, 2008 at 11:57 am
Many thanks for linking to my Mundane SF post. You make some great points in relation to it. For some reason, perhaps because of his tremendous commercial success, I never think of Neil Gaiman’s work in relation to any movements, which is odd because he has clearly had a massive influence over the field. But its true that there are many movements growing outwards from the SF field at the moment. Its a very exciting time to be writing in. I would like to see literature move past the high vs. low culture argument, as visual arts and music largely have. It might help it re-engage a wider range of audiences again.