rolanni: (drosselmeyer)
[personal profile] rolanni
There was at Albacon a panel discussion around the topic of saving SF from academia. I wasn't on it; Steve moderated; it's been blogged elsewhere by another panelist, who is firmly in the "academia is not the enemy" camp. I tried a short rebuttal in her blog, because I'm just as firmly in the "oh, youbetcha academia is the enemy" side of the road. I'm bringing it over here because I don't want to get into a spitting match with this nice lady, but I do want to explore my own thoughts on the matter a little more, because the...strength... of my reaction surprises me.

There are a couple things going on in the deep background behind that question. I'll try to be brief.

Point One

Science Fiction has had an Inferiority Complex almost since its mass market birth, when it was viewed (by academics, my mom, high school English teachers, and other Right Thinking People) as being on the same intellectual level as porn, and was often displayed on the same spinners in the newstands (yes, this was a looooooonnnnnggggg time ago, in a very different world). Since then, it has, as a field, Ached to be Studied. Because Study = Validation. Validation means my Work is Worthy, and writers, as everyone else, need to feel that their work has value.

What seems not to be understood is that academics don't study and write articles in order to Validate the object of their study. Academics study and write articles in order to Validate themselves. As more and more people become academics, they must look further and further afield for subjects, and lo! suddenly Science Fiction isn't genre trash anymore; it's a way to secure tenure.

Still, there will be some folks in the field who lust after that Validation, and who will write in order to be studied. If that's what floats their boat, then they're welcome to it; I'll just sit over here in the corner and write escapist genre novels.

Escapist genre novels.

*Walks around the phrase and admires it from all sides*

Yeah.

Point Two

I write, in the words of the immortal Damon Knight, for people's beer money. My mission is to give you an escape from the mundane world for an hour or three. I do not write deathless, finely crafted prose, my sentences arrayed on the page like rows of cut emeralds. I write space opera, fantasy, and mystery. I write to give people pleasure.

Now, yes, sometimes it's pleasurable to sit down with a book that makes you sweat for every nuance. But that's not the only pleasure to be had from reading. It's perfectly legitimate to read a book because it makes you feel good. This is what genre books are for.

In my humble opinion, college English courses are the main reason that so many people say that they no longer read for pleasure at all. It's this fantastical notion that everything must be analyzed for nuance, scrutinized for detail, examined to discover the Real Story that's hiding under the Apparent Story. The message that many take away from their English teachers is that the only Right Way to read is by the Analysis Method, and yanno? after a long day? Much too fatiguing. Wanna watch a Jackie Chan movie?

Point Three

Some folks want to make the "should we teach SF" question into a discussion of Good Teachers vs. Bad Teachers. This is a Red Herring. The question is not, Should SF be taught badly or well? The question is: Should SF be taught at all? And the answer -- again, from my perspective -- is No.

Teach Shakespeare, teach Tolkien, teach, by all means and with my full support, how to Read Critically. Critical reading is a Necessary Life Skill. But, please, do not teach genre fiction. There's too little fun in the world anymore, and reading is one of life's greatest pleasures.

Sigh.

Well, I don't know that I've solved anything, but I sure feel better.

Edited to Add: Comments have been frozen on this entry as of 4:08 PM EDT Wednesday, October 22, 2008. Pilot's choice.

Son of Edited to Add: Unfortunately, there seems to be no way to disable further commenting on the main post while still allowing the comments that have already been made to remain visible. So, the comments are now invisible, which is a pity, but there you are.

(frozen) Re: Hmm...

Date: 2008-10-22 05:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grassrose.livejournal.com
"I understand what rolanni seems to be worried about: what I don't understand is why."

Probably because of conversations she's had with those so affected, and posts like some of those in this thread. We've got a multitude of personalities in the discussion. Some have been turned off by analysis; some thrive on it.

When you consider that this population is a filtered sample of those who have found rolanni's livejournal and who, presumably, still read for pleasure (be it analytical or not), you've got to wonder what percentage of non-readers are unrepresented. Some of the comments have referred to "my girlfriend" or some other friend or relative who has been permanently (?) turned off of reading for pleasure, by excess analysis.

"While sf YA novels may be taught in school (especially The Giver), academic analytical skills aren't enforced until late high-school or early college."

Not exactly true anymore. Check out what some of the grade schools are doing. A friend of mine (avid reader) who is trying to foster a love of reading in her third grader has been disgusted by the mandatory summer reading/reporting programs. They're trying to force the kids to read from an "approved, age appropriate" list. That doesn't mean they can't read more advanced material; it means they can't read the more juvenile stuff.

In other words, if I want to read and report on Harry Potter, well, that's probably not age-appropriate for a 45-year-old, so I won't get credit for it, and I'll STILL have to read three books off THEIR list. By the time I'm done reading and reporting on that, I'll probably be too frustrated and angry to want to go back to Harry Potter - especially if I'm just a beginning reader. Not to mention that the summer will probably be just about over.

"Frankly, mostly I've heard the "turned off" bit about authors whose work that particular person would never have liked under any circumstances. If the book does have a good story, great characters, or some other JFF lure, that seems to come through no matter what."

I see your point. I also think rolanni might be fighting a losing battle. Many avid readers go into academia. The more they value escapist genres (or individual works in those genres), the more likely they are to want to help others appreciate what they value. That means blogs, papers, and... adding it to the curriculum. They justifiably want to bring others into their community. Given the wide variety of personalities and learning styles, this will occasionally backfire. Loudly.

However, I don't think it's going to be possible to set aside a refuge, with a sign saying "Here there be dragons - no scientists allowed!"

(frozen) Re: Hmm...

Date: 2008-10-22 06:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nellorat.livejournal.com
I echo the thread title--Hmm...

If opinion about the effects of teaching literature are so split, maybe the question of good vs. bad teachers is not a red herring after all.

As far as summer reading assignments, I know my view is affected by the fact that I teach at a Korean-American academy: my students are in regular school all day, meet with me individually as a tutor during evenings and on Sunday, and attend class at the academy all day Saturday. Over the summer, they are in class four to six days a week, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., working on the sciences, math, test-prep, and English. So three books in 2 1/2 months does not seem very onerous to me, even for a slow reader, if there is no other summer school!

I'd propose, at most, that maybe English should only be required two years each out of high school and college, for non-majors--as long as other classes, including science, took up the slack in teaching writing. That way, if people don't want to analyze literature, after getting a taste of the basic skills, they can do other things. As was the case with me and math.

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