Authors. Feh.
Jun. 4th, 2007 08:35 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Apparently Ray Bradbury has been saying that Fahrenheit 451 is not a book about censorship, but one about television. And everyone is up in arms about it trying to prove that he once said different.
Can I just say it doesn't matter? If there was ever a clear piece of evidence that the author is not the ultimate authority on a work, it's right here. Stop paying attention to Bradbury and talk about the book. Talk about the book as an anti-censorship work. Don't rebut Bradbury in terms of his brain. It's kind of his turf, so it's not going to go well for you.
I notice that a lot of the people commenting on this are themselves authors, so maybe they have trouble letting go of their own, um, authority. If you're an author, learn to be one of many readers of the book you've written. Find and read Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill's "Pharaoh's Daughter" because she's an author who gets it.
Can I just say it doesn't matter? If there was ever a clear piece of evidence that the author is not the ultimate authority on a work, it's right here. Stop paying attention to Bradbury and talk about the book. Talk about the book as an anti-censorship work. Don't rebut Bradbury in terms of his brain. It's kind of his turf, so it's not going to go well for you.
I notice that a lot of the people commenting on this are themselves authors, so maybe they have trouble letting go of their own, um, authority. If you're an author, learn to be one of many readers of the book you've written. Find and read Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill's "Pharaoh's Daughter" because she's an author who gets it.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-05 03:29 am (UTC)The problem with authorial intent is that you have:
1. What the author intended when he or she wrote the book
2. What the author remembers as having intended
3. What the author decides to tell people he or she intended
4. The book as it exists, regardless of (1)
Since I don't care about (1), and (2) and (3) make intent completely unknowable with any accuracy, we might as well focus on (4). (4) doesn't exist in a vacuum (there's the cultural and historical context in which the reader lives and reads, and which the reader believes the book was written and published in, and all other kinds of sociocultural and material contexts), but it's *knowable* in a way intent just *isn't*.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-05 04:16 am (UTC)lots of unchecked uncheckable factors go into a thing. the author is the last person i would listen to.
*understood there are exceptions. i can pinpoint where Harry Potter looses any sort of additional input, somewheres in book 4. my theory is that once they realized they would make money with no additional effort, they stopped additionally efforting. the results are disaster.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-05 04:26 am (UTC)Sorry, that anecdote had no point. I just felt like telling it.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-05 05:04 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-05 05:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-05 11:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-05 02:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-06 07:32 am (UTC)But the key is still the text. If George Lucas comes forth and says, "In fact, Star Wars isn't a Campbellian/Jungian journey, it's a metaphor for the gold standard," believe me, I'll quite happily ignore him.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-06 11:38 am (UTC)