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(boing!) Cnoocy Mosque O'Witz

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[personal profile] cnoocy
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.

Date: 2007-06-05 03:29 am (UTC)
jadelennox: Senora Sabasa Garcia, by Goya (Default)
From: [personal profile] jadelennox
But to that extent, you can *never* say "Book X was written about Y". You can only say "The author of Book X says it was written about Y" or "Many critics interpret Book X to be about Y."

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*.

Date: 2007-06-05 04:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] aspartaimee.livejournal.com
from the inside out, i would like to point out that there's usually other people, like an editor involved somewhere. ideally, an editor will be invisible, but her changes can alter all of the above nonetheless. even that definitive work of completely unknowable intent on all sides known as the holy bible had editors.*

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.

Date: 2007-06-05 04:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tahnan.livejournal.com
Interestingly, the first time I really noticed this was with Spider Robinson. I used to really like him (but then, I used to really like Heinlein, too), though with his Callahan's stories, I kind of felt he was starting to slip a little, and Callahan's Lady was a little much. Then he had a series of new Callahan's stories in Asimov's (I think), which I read--they were at the library, which was right across the street from my apartment at the time--and I thought, "Wow, hey, these are pretty good. Maybe he's back." When they were collected and expanded into a book, I got the book from the library, and there was this really, really clear point at which the collected stories, which had gone through the editor of Asimov's, stopped, and Robinson's freeform "I'll just write whatever the hell I want" started.

Sorry, that anecdote had no point. I just felt like telling it.

Date: 2007-06-05 05:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] aspartaimee.livejournal.com
right. we see this in movies as well, like Peter Jackson's "King Kong." sure, LoTR worked, but that doesn't mean the man should go unchecked.

Date: 2007-06-05 05:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dougo.livejournal.com
I agree that there's no way to know for sure what the author intended, but I still think it's an interesting thing to speculate about, and these speculations factor into the way I think about a text. I guess you could say that what the author says about a text is another text in itself, and that should be approached separately. But I think the slogan "authorial intent doesn't matter" is either misleading, or I'm just still confused.

Date: 2007-06-05 02:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] prog.livejournal.com
IOW, consider the author a reader who happens to be intimately familiar with the work. Their opinion has great weight, but it does not objectively trump any other interpretation of the work.

Date: 2007-06-06 07:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tahnan.livejournal.com
Heck, I have fun speculating on what an author might have been thinking. (Often in the sense of "for christ's sake, man, what were you thinking? you call this a plot?") And sometimes an author's statements can give me a new insight into a text--when I heard Brust talk about his political beliefs and how they influenced Teckla, I looked at it and thought, "Oh, that gives me a new perspective on the text."

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.

Date: 2007-06-06 11:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rikchik.livejournal.com
But it's so obvious! C3PO's trials and tribulations - he even gets sort of melted down a few times! (OK, I'll stop.)

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