T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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972.1 | Not so sure about that? | NYTP07::LAM | Q ��Ktl�� | Tue Apr 16 1991 04:31 | 12 |
| re: .0
I'm not sure I agree. Though I haven't read that many S&S fantasies,
the few that I have read seem to be poor imitations of Tolkien's "Lord
Of The Rings" and that comes closer in similarity to Wagner's opera the
"Ring Of Nibelung."
As for Turks being perfect villains, I recall some of the Europeans
weren't exactly nice guys either. I heard that during the Crusades,
the so-called "Christians"(and I use the term lightly) committed some
horrible atrocities. They burned, raped, pillaged and tortured all in
the name of God.
|
972.2 | Literary Traditions | ATSE::WAJENBERG | | Tue Apr 16 1991 10:30 | 38 |
| For a one-word explanation of why fantasy is so heavy with S&S and why
S&S is so heavy with specifically medieval coloring, the word is
"Arthur." (For a second word, you could add "Charlemagne.")
Much modern fantasy traces back to the romances and romantic fantasies
of the 19th century. These, in turn, were reacting against the 18th
century and Enlightenment literatures, and went looking for the magical,
emotional, and mysterious. Naturally enough, they decided to champion
the period their predecessors vilified, the Middle Ages. There, the
adventure tales are dominated by the original Swords and Sorcery, and,
yes, colored by contemporary problems like Moslem invasions and the
crusades. (Notice how modern fantasies are colored by problems like
environmental decay.)
By the way, the lack of a university system in fantasy is not
particularly true to the High Middle Ages, which start around 1200, the
time of .0. By then the medieval/modern university system was starting
and the Scholastics were coming to dominate the academic scene.
The lack of an analog for the Church is interesting. An organized
church is a quintessential example, in many modern minds, of Authority,
of the Establishment, pushing things like Duty, Sin and Guilt (in
initial caps, preferably in red ink). Fantasy literature tends to be
written in a spirit of rebellion, however modified and disguised, and
it is much easier and more satisfying to write of rebellion against an
organized religion than to try and enlist it among the Good Guys. The
Bad Guys, as .0 points out, are generally tyrants, not anarchists or
raiding barbarians.
Katherine Kurtz's Deryni series is a notable exception, but she has her
conflict going on within the church.
Also, there is marketing. Religion is such a volatile topic, you'll
offend fewer readers if you just skirt the issue. Oddly enough, the
divine can be treated more freely, probably because it stays at a
comfortably remote distance from the reader's actual life.
Earl Wajenberg
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972.3 | My tommygun versus your wand | SUBWAY::MAXSON | Repeal Gravity | Tue Apr 16 1991 23:08 | 19 |
| The second "S" of S&S is sorcery, and you have to go back a way before
you find literary traditions that accept magic as a plausible. Even
Shakespeare was largely free of magic, with notable the notable
exception being Prospero in The Tempest. I think that even in
Elizabethean times there wasn't much of a stomach for magicians.
Perhaps that is why Celtic and Norse backdrops are so popular - the
cultural heritage is ripe with magical possibilities. Also, Indian/
Mexican folklore has magical possibilities, and Creole voodoo
traditions. All three of these have been extensively mined for story
ideas.
It's just hard to put sorcery in other backdrops - the roaring twenties
and prohibition days were not ripe with spiritual activism. The wild
west had few enchanting gunslingers, and the Spanish Inquisition was
only marginally involved with witchcraft.
Feel free to prove me wrong by writing one, but S&S seems to function
best in backdrops which were already rich in spiritual mythology.
|
972.4 | Wild West | SWSCIM::GEOFFREY | Beware the robots of Cricket | Wed Apr 17 1991 11:07 | 14 |
|
> It's just hard to put sorcery in other backdrops - the roaring twenties
> and prohibition days were not ripe with spiritual activism. The wild
> west had few enchanting gunslingers, and the Spanish Inquisition was
> only marginally involved with witchcraft.
>
> Feel free to prove me wrong by writing one, but S&S seems to function
> best in backdrops which were already rich in spiritual mythology.
Well one example that kinda fits and kinda doesn't fit (I'm not
sure what you would call it) into the wild west would be Stephen Kings
Gunslinger novels (2) The Darktower and The Drawing of the Three.
Jim
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972.5 | | TECRUS::REDFORD | | Wed Apr 17 1991 20:30 | 24 |
| re: .2
The reasons for the missing Church in S&S sound just right: an
overarching authority is an unpleasant concept to modern writers,
and a touchy one to boot. Incidentally, if you're interested in
an SF writer's slant on medieval theology, you can't do better
than "Doctor Mirabilis" by James Blish. It's a non-SF novel about
Roger Bacon, the great 13th century philosopher/scientist/wizard.
Blish adds to Bacon's legend by crediting him with a great
discovery, an invention that appears to him in a dream and saves
Europe. Bacon came to a bad end, but the novel's ending is moving
and profound.
re: .3 - magic can only be portrayed in times sympathetic to it
That doesn't restrict one much! Just about every culture except ours
believed in some kind of supernatural occurences. Ghosts in
China, animist spirits in Africa, yogic powers in India; you can
find magic in almost any period and place. If you want to set
things in the West in recent centuries, just create an alternate
history where magic works, as did Card in "Seventh Son", or
Randall Garrett in the Lord D'Arcy stories.
/jlr
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972.6 | Card is a groundbreaker | SUBWAY::MAXSON | Repeal Gravity | Thu Apr 18 1991 04:19 | 15 |
| .4 - I confess I haven't read these. I will.
.6 - You're right - Seventh Son by OS Card is a good example. But note
that it's set in a Christian motif (7th son of a 7th son is a mythos
of Biblical origin, after all) and thus, is in a realm sympathetic
to supernatural events - particularly the nineteenth century Bible
Belt. I have to give Card a lot of credit for daring and originality,
though - most writers are reluctant to play with the Christian mythos,
with the only other exceptions that come to mind are Steven K.Z. Brust
and to a lesser extent, Roger Zelazny. This is sensitive turf, and I
can see why authors steer clear of it.
Hmmm. Sounds like an opportunity, doesn't it?
- M
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972.7 | F&SF rather likes religion, just not churches. | ATSE::WAJENBERG | | Thu Apr 18 1991 10:36 | 53 |
| Re .6
The theme of 7 as a significant number is not terribly Biblical, and I
can't recall anything about 7th sons in the Bible at all. 7 was a
special number throughout the ancient eastern Mediterranean, and
consequently became special to all cultures inheriting from that one.
7s show up in the Bible, but also in ancient Babylon, Greece, Rome,
etc. Probably it all traces back to the seven planets of ancient
Mesopotamian astronomy.
Particular real-world religions may not appear often in F&SF, but
theology and religion in general certainly do. Let's see, there's:
Piers Anthony's Incarnations of Immortality series, in which God and
the Devil appear as the incarnations of good and evil.
Michael Moorcock's "The Warhound and the World's Pain," in which Satan
sends a mercenary captain to seek the Holy Grail so that he (Satan) can
get back in touch with God to apologise. (That's even specifically
Christian.)
Micahel Moorcock's much older "Behold the Man," an SF time-travel story
with a completely blasphemous treatment of the life of Christ.
James Blish's "Black Easter" and "The Day After Judgement," a very
upsetting picture of Armageddon, also specifically Christian.
Blish's "A Case of Conscience," involving a Jesuit in a subtle
theological snare involving an alien race.
Katherine Kurtz's prolific Deryni series, drenched in medieval
ecclesiology.
"To Reign In Hell" (I think; I've totally forgotten the author), about
the politics behind the creation of the universe.
The "[Mumble] in Hell" series, which I haven't read but appears to be a
series of novels about various spectacular people in a Christian-style
(or Christian-style-derived) Hell.
Niven and Pournelle's "Inferno," based on Dante's "Inferno."
P. C. Hodgell's "Godstalk" and sequel (we still awaiting the
completing of a trilogy) about the Kencyrath, a Chosen Race like the
Israelites, though they rather more closely resemble half-elven ninjas.
That's a very idiosyncratic sample, taken over about 20 years, but I
think it shows that playing with theistic and specifically Christian
ideas is certainly possible in SF, even if it isn't as common as, say,
aliens or time travel.
Earl Wajenberg
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972.8 | | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante divorcee | Thu Apr 18 1991 14:19 | 2 |
| There's also the "Warlock in Spite of Himself" which has the Catholic church in
a big way as part of the story. liesl
|
972.9 | Catholic references in "Dune" | HOCUS::LAM | | Thu Apr 18 1991 16:16 | 4 |
| I recall that in Frank Herbert's "Dune", the Bene Gesserit sisterhood
had similarities to Roman Catholic nuns. There is also mention of a
book called "The Orange Catholic Bible" but I don't recall what it was
exactly.
|
972.10 | It was catholic, not Catholic. | ATSE::WAJENBERG | | Thu Apr 18 1991 16:22 | 10 |
| Re .9
The Orange Catholic Bible was an ecclectice ("catholic" in the sense of
universal") collection of religious literature, originally bound in
orange, that became the principle scripture of the religion of the Dune
universe. This religion is never spelled out in much detail, but
certainly the terminology is designed to make Roman Catholic
resonnances in the reader's mind.
Earl Wajenberg
|
972.11 | Dune religion seems like Islam. | HOCUS::LAM | | Thu Apr 18 1991 16:45 | 11 |
| re: .10
Earl,
I read "Dune" many years ago so I forget exact details but it
seemed to me that many of the religious references came closer to
Moslem, Arabic or Middle Eastern culture. This was probably because of
the desert nature on the planet "Dune". The Fremen of Dune sounded
seemed a lot like the Bedouine tribes in North Africa. Things like
the "Orange Catholic Bible" which has Christian connotations were slight.
ktlam...
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972.12 | Dune religion is also very New Age | ATSE::WAJENBERG | | Fri Apr 19 1991 11:30 | 20 |
| Re .11
It's been a long time since I read "Dune," either, but I certainly
recall the Moslem elements, especially around the Fremen. In fact,
certain items dropped in the appendices and pseudo-references at the
beginnings of chapters made it fairly clear that the Fremen, at least,
are descended from bedouins who either were exiled to Arrakis or fled
to Arrakis generations before.
What I can remember of the theological content of the (unnamed)
galactic religion is, however, classic "New Age" 30 years before its
time. It is syncretistic (all the Christian, Moslem, Hindu, and
Buddhist bits included in the Orange Catholic Bible); it is feminist
(the Reverend Mothers, who were apparently not just a feature of the
Bene Gesserit); it is mystical (the various mystical experiences,
mostly induced by melange spice); it is "esper-centric" (the
precognitive powers of Guildsmen and Paul that are the center of the
plot).
Earl Wajenberg
|
972.13 | Arthur Fans | FSOA::LCHESTER | | Fri Apr 19 1991 15:53 | 23 |
| re: .2
I believe you're right about Arthur. Myself and a group of three
friends avidly search out any book about the times of Arthur, and
share them back and forth. MZB's "Mists of Avalon" is a personal
favorite, but there are at least half a dozen books in recent years
who write from Guenivere's viewpoint. Picked up Mallory's the
"morte d'Arthur" recently and waded through it - found I prefer
my fiction more suitably digested, such as W.B. White or Mary
Stewart. We're seeing more and more Merlin books, too. Recommend
Tolstoi's latest, although it's a bit hard to get into.
Are these fantasy? Sure. But once you get the history part
down, it's fascinating to see how many variations of the story
there are. For example, Knealley's (sp?) latest is volume 1
of a trilogy on Arthur (called "The Hawk's Gray Feather"), set
in her SF worlds of the Keltiad, established in her earlier
trilogy.
Guess the point I'm making is that medieval sells, and there
are lots of us who look forward to any new SF set in that time.
Laura
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972.14 | | LABRYS::CONNELLY | arduum cursum angelorum perficere | Fri Apr 19 1991 23:25 | 13 |
| re: .12
Wasn't the Orange Catholic Bible a product of the "Butlerian Jihad"
in _Dune_? I don't recall any explanation of who Butler was (other than
an obvious reference to Herbert's favorite author, Samuel Butler), but
the BJ was a neo-Luddite revolt against computers and AI (Herbert's
prescient response to the later cyber-punk genre, perhaps? ;-)).
The best match-up with the "Turks vs. the west" theory (in fantasy) is
probably John Ford's _The Dragon Waiting_, where various fictional
characters help Richard III take on the Byzantine Empire in an alternate
timestream where Christianity never catches on. Good read.
paul
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972.15 | | UPSAR::THOMAS | The Code Warrior | Fri Apr 19 1991 23:53 | 2 |
| The best match up is "Drawing of the Dark" by ??? (he did "The Anibus
Gates" too). It concerns the Turks siege of Vienna.
|
972.16 | The devil lives in the details | SUBWAY::MAXSON | Repeal Gravity | Sun Apr 21 1991 18:08 | 11 |
| Re: .7
'To Reign in Hell' is SKZ Brust, mentioned in .6.
I had forgotten Blish, which is stupid of me, since I'm currently
reading his "Devil's Day", which I'll review in a little bit.
And I'll dig out the 7th son lineage from the Old Testament - I really
can't believe my memory these days.
- M
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