I’ve been traveling and unable to come up with a worthy blog post for this week, so I dipped into the archives to see what I thought about things ten years ago. The literary vs. genre debate seems to have lost steam, but it’s always good to look at issues afresh, especially if one is stuck or a new topic.
Will Self got his knickers in a bunch a couple of weeks ago
about the death of the novel. Well, the death through lack of
sales and public attention of what he considers to be “the novel,” by which he
appears to mean “literary novels,” more specifically, “his novels.” I don’t
expect you to read the entire diatribe. I couldn’t. If this self-absorbed and
condescending essay is any indication of his fiction, then his novels aren’t
just dying; they’re committing suicide.
This is, at its core,
another self-pitying example of a “literary” writer lamenting a lack of sales
and recognition compared to what he considers to be inferior work. As The
Beloved Spouse would say, “wah.” To begin such a discussion is to admit defeat.
The writers of the past, whose recognition the modern “literary” writer seeks
to duplicate, did not, by and large, think of themselves as writing for
posterity. They became “literary” after their deaths, because their books
outlived them, not because that was the original plan.
Musicians have this debate
all the time, though it centers along the lines of, “Why are programs so
overloaded with dead composers? Where is the new music?” There is a lot of new
(classical) music out there; few want to listen to it, with good reason. Not
because it’s bad, but because around a hundred years ago composers started
writing for their peers. Not even their peers, really, but those they liked to
think of as their peers. A culture grew where an ever-smaller cadre of
composers praised music that became ever more obtuse or formulaic in its
adherence to arbitrary rules. Music that contained traditional elements
(melody, harmony, tonality) was dismissed as “reactionary.”
This is a not uncommon
situation in the arts. I was once coerced into a trip to the National Gallery
of Art by someone who wished to appear more cultured than she was. (Editor’s
Note: I am not claiming to be more cultured than she, just that I make no effort
to appear otherwise.) At one point we encountered a painting that looks very
much like this (bonus points to anyone who can identify the actual painting;
its name escapes me):
Our discussion proceeded
along these lines:
Her: What do you think?
Me: Huh?
Her: What do you think it
means?
Me: You’re shitting me,
right?
I’m a believer in art for
art’s sake. I don’t consider my writing to be art—an opinion in which I need
not stake out a lonely outpost to defend—I do it for the pleasure and
satisfaction of the act, much the way a preschooler is more interested in
process than results when finger painting. That doesn’t mean I sympathize with
authors/musicians/artists who deliberately create for an audience so far to the
right of their perceived bell-shaped curve no one else can understand it, let
alone “appreciate” it. Too narrowly self-defining one’s audience guarantees its
limits; the creator cannot then reasonably complain about a lack of
acclimation.
This is not to say current
cultural standards are not deplorable. Not enough people read, or listen to
music, or, hell, even think about things beyond what’s right in front of them.
This is not a new concept. Just as old ballplayers claim the game was better in
their day, the erosion of cultural standards has been lamented since the
origins of cultural standards. Here’s the thing: if you want to be popular,
create things the general population can get into, and not things you think
the general population should get into, if they had a clue. By
all means, create those things; just don’t bitch when they’re not popular. No
society owes any artist a living, not when there are too many people hanging on
by their fingernails.
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