(urth) theories
Sergei SOLOVIEV
soloviev at irit.fr
Sun Oct 23 08:29:50 PDT 2011
I would like to say a few words as well -
I mostly agree with Gerry when I look and wonder at the endless
discussions where (almost)
everybody tries to push forward his own theory and usually pays very little
attention to the solidity of his own arguments
>Gerry Quinn
>I think you (and some others) greatly misunderstand the nature of
Wolfe’s books. You seem to think >of them as some sort of puzzle in
which a hidden underlying story, cloned from some ancient myth or
>other, is disguised as a science fiction story. The object (you think)
is to peel away the extraneous >matter and locate the crossword clues to
the true story you think is lurking underneath. You clutch at >every
possible classical reference because with those there’s always some way
to play six degrees of >Kevin Bacon towards whatever scheme you are
trying to impose on the story.
>Why would Wolfe engage in a complicated, arbitrary, pointless scheme
such as this? He is writing >his own stories.
There are especially many theories trying to declare that different
personages are
identical, many theories trying to see incest everywhere... And theories
are often so similar -
it reminds me a short story where a poor guy wanted to kill himself
and invented more and more methods - then went to a priest (the poor guy
was a believer) to ask, whether this new method is a suicide. Of course
the answer
was "yes" - and he tried to invent another.
Question: the popularity of such theories, is it in some way a
consequence of American cultural environment/tradition? I have seen a
very similar situation at Nabokov's Forum, and much less - in the Forums
that are mostly European or Russian (they have of course their own
obsessive trends).
Best regards,
Sergei Soloviev
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