ThReads Must Roll: the new, improved rolling fantasy, science fiction, speculative fiction &c. thread

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (5028 of them)

There's so many artists like this though. Apart from his bigotry I actually admire HPL a great deal, not just his work.

It's the currently living writers who did reprehensible shit that troubles me more about possibly liking their work.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 14:14 (six years ago) link

Also, that Nick Mamatas story mentioned in the link sounds hilarious.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 14:24 (six years ago) link

don't know if anyone else in the thread has read it, but mark (k-punk) fisher's final book, the weird and the eerie is basically a little essay on -- among other things -- the pertinence of HPL's cosmic worldview and of speculative fiction generally

mark s, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 14:32 (six years ago) link

It is frustrating that "Great God Pan" wasn't in Joshi's Machen collection but I'm guessing it was intended for a second Penguin collection that never happened.

Joshi recommended someone else to do the MR James Penguin collections but Penguin insisted that it had to be Joshi.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 15:21 (six years ago) link

they should have asked me

mark s, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 15:23 (six years ago) link

I find these "controversies" about HPL a little baffling, insofar as I don't see what's so difficult about being open about both his faults and virtues. If the question is "can racists be great writers" the answer is undoubtedly yes, but it's useful to note that it isn't their racism that makes them great.

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 15:29 (six years ago) link

i'm guessing joshi is enraged bcz he feels like he's committed his life to pushing HPL up the respectability hill, aesthetically and culturally speaking, and was finally feeling he might actually have lastingly got him there -- only to have him knocked right back off the hill politically

obviously i think the problem here is believing respectability is a be-all-and-end-all gain for genre work -- but it's quite a widespread anxiety among those who've devoted a lot of time (and the qualifications their education brought them) to exploring pulp and pop forms; bcz of course you want your work respected beyond yr immediate peers, even if it's only ever seen you worrying away at militantly unrespectable forms

(i think you can also trace a version of it in mark fisher's work, for example: though respectability means something very different for him, since he wants HLP and others to have the respect of his fellow political radical and dissident philosophers -- and of course it's all over the upper levels of music-writing)

mark s, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 15:54 (six years ago) link

yeah I'm not much invested in the cult-of-respectability, I have a much more knee-jerk reaction against those that reject pulp and pop forms out of hand. When Calvin Trillin says there is no good science fiction my impulse isn't to figure out how to somehow convince him he's wrong and change his mind, it just makes me think Trillin is an idiot.

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 16:01 (six years ago) link

still, it's handy social capital for getting such nice things into the world as a collection or three of lovecraft short stories in well made (and well* annotated) penguin modern classic editions

*ish

mark s, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 16:19 (six years ago) link

true, I do like those kinds of things!

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 16:21 (six years ago) link

I find these "controversies" about HPL a little baffling, insofar as I don't see what's so difficult about being open about both his faults and virtues.

― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 16:29

People disagree about how these things ought to be healthily acknowledged. There's a lot of defensiveness and ostracism and an anxiety about some younger readers and writers who refuse to read the problematic canon. This ties in with a younger and more diverse audience demanding better behaviour at conventions and online. A lot of the older club members are more willing to overlook shitty behaviour that alienates others. Some of the young liberals also behave in a vile and exclusionary way.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 17:06 (six years ago) link

I'm inclined to think all canons are problematic, and reading and wrestling with them is part of being a young reader/writer. Like, that's the job.

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 17:12 (six years ago) link

Lovecraft is just one among a number of artists whose work I personally appreciate and am able to separate from the artist but that I'd have difficulty recommending to anyone else (particularly without explicitly calling attention to that which is problematic). It's difficult to know how to properly navigate through those waters, particularly since I increasingly assume that the majority of public figures are/were scumbags of one sort or another until it's revealed after their death that they've been secretly paying Rosa Parks's rent for decades.

this is ridcolus (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 4 October 2017 17:14 (six years ago) link

the guy is so massively influential and his best stories are *so* good I don't have any reservations about recommending his stuff to anyone who's curious about spec fiction and horror writing. The racism in his stories is pretty overt, any competent reader should be able to spot it for what it is.

I'd sooner recommend him than other equally "problematic" canonical dudes like, say, Heinlein or Van Vogt.

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 17:18 (six years ago) link

Some insist it hurts too much to read stuff like that. I can't really argue with that because I don't know what it's like for them, but I hope they want to be able to read ultra-bigots eventually.
If you refuse to ever read misogyny, that's cutting out an enormous amount of great writers from all around the world.

I once seen this fantasy fan brag they didn't read anything before 2000, from the bad old days. As if all writing around the world holds the same social attitudes.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 18:55 (six years ago) link

Also annoying: people who've been ball deep in Lovecraft for years suddenly saying they never really liked him that much. And fans who're walking on eggshells and assuring you they know how awful his views were.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 4 October 2017 19:35 (six years ago) link

I mean, if we get to the level of the individual reader sure read whatever the fuck you want, why should ppl force themselves to read Great Authors if their bigotry speaks more loudly to them than their skill? It's when it gets to criticism/canonisation that this conversation gets trickier imo.

I once seen this fantasy fan brag they didn't read anything before 2000, from the bad old days. As if all writing around the world holds the same social attitudes.

Yeah, there's a real feeling amongst some younger progressives that everything pre-2000 (in any medium, really) is just a swamp of bigotry, which is obviously unfair to scores of older artists but also carries with it this smugness that now it's all been figured out and there's no way current writing will seem ultra-problematic in decades to come.

obviously i think the problem here is believing respectability is a be-all-and-end-all gain for genre work -- but it's quite a widespread anxiety among those who've devoted a lot of time (and the qualifications their education brought them) to exploring pulp and pop forms; bcz of course you want your work respected beyond yr immediate peers, even if it's only ever seen you worrying away at militantly unrespectable forms

This feels like such a dwindling preoccupation to me - highbrow respectable institutions these days are either a) hugely invested in not being That Guy re: dismissing genre and pop or b) losing readers and "cultural relevancy" by the day. Obviously someone like Joshi is old enough to remember this being different, but at this point I always feel like the snooty genre-dismisser is more a strawman ppl bring up because it's romantic to rail against them than a real person.

Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 5 October 2017 10:37 (six years ago) link

A while ago my brother was talking to a nice young man who was taken aback by being told that a British tv channel in the 90s once had a "strong women" film season. As if that didn't seem possible in the 90s.

Unfortunately there's a popular impression of HPL today that his work is nothing but racism. So I can understand why some people would find that unapproachable.
Some HPL fans even believe that it's compelling because they think it's all sublimated racism. I don't buy this take at all.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 5 October 2017 12:22 (six years ago) link

Just watched a fantasy panel with Andrzej Sapkowski (The Witcher series, better known as a videogame) and he was the grumpiest panelist I've ever seen.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 5 October 2017 12:27 (six years ago) link

That pre-2000 avoidance is, uh, insane. WTF.

In keeping with the thread topic, I've shifted my reading to Halloween mode. I've been reading a Lord Dunsany collection (which is excellent and fits snugly among the mounds of ancient history/religion stuff I've been reading lately) and I just started House on the Borderland this morning. (William) Hope (Hodgson) it lives up to the hype.

this is ridcolus (Old Lunch), Thursday, 5 October 2017 12:29 (six years ago) link

I love that book so much I will make sure nobody ever makes a film of it. I did enjoy Corben's comic version though.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 5 October 2017 12:40 (six years ago) link

When that first came out, I was like, 'why did they choose to adapt some book I've never heard of that looks like a Lovecraft ripoff?' Naiveté, lol.

this is ridcolus (Old Lunch), Thursday, 5 October 2017 12:47 (six years ago) link

Some HPL fans even believe that it's compelling because they think it's all sublimated racism. I don't buy this take at all.

I was going to make a half-arsed argument along these lines - some of the stories that are most clearly about decadence due to miscegenation, "Shadow Over Innsmouth" and all that, do get some of their potency from Lovecraft's idiotic racial fears - but ultimately that's not what's at the heart of Lovecraft for me so much as the well-known cosmic horror, uncaring universe thing. If his mythos had included some Golden Age before the Old Ones the reactionary element would be harder to dismiss, but since there isn't, in the end the "savages" in "Call Of Cthulhu" know more than the civilized narrator - which is not to say their portrayal is ok, of course.

I love Lord Dunsany. Particularly the one about the club with the forgotten kings and the one about the dude buried alive for years and years.

Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 5 October 2017 13:04 (six years ago) link

i think there's a continuity: for HPL the borderland between unfeeling chaotic repulsive outer cosmos has always been right here on this planet, albeit for long periods hidden from the fragile civilised spaces and minds -- and the existence (and very being) of the uncivilised peoples on the world is a manifestation of it; they understand acknowledge and worship cthulhu bcz they are in essence coterminous with him in lovecraft's mind

mark s, Thursday, 5 October 2017 13:28 (six years ago) link

I've never read Lovecraft, but I hated Alan Moore's two HPL comics, so maybe I should read the proper thing. I've got Vol 1 of the two collected editions at home...

Chuck_Tatum, Thursday, 5 October 2017 13:31 (six years ago) link

Those more well-versed in Lovecraft can confirm or pooh-pooh, but it's long been my assessment that his depictions of an unfeeling chaotic repulsive outer cosmos are really just expressions of extreme xenophobia taken to their (il)logical conclusion. Fear of the other and that which lies outside of ourselves blown up to cosmic extremes.

this is ridcolus (Old Lunch), Thursday, 5 October 2017 13:35 (six years ago) link

I really don't know about that, Old Lunch: there is so much else that was around in Lovecraft's time/influenced him that you could attribute that sense of cosmic horror to, first and foremost the collapse of traditional religious values and ideological certainties, WWI, psychoanalysis, etc. You really don't have to be a racist to think the universe is empty and indifferent, and from there to actively hostile is a short leap.

i think there's a continuity: for HPL the borderland between unfeeling chaotic repulsive outer cosmos has always been right here on this planet, albeit for long periods hidden from the fragile civilised spaces and minds -- and the existence (and very being) of the uncivilised peoples on the world is a manifestation of it; they understand acknowledge and worship cthulhu bcz they are in essence coterminous with him in lovecraft's mind

This is well put, but I still think part of the horror for Lovecraft is that the "civilized" peoples aren't any different really, they just don't know/have managed to mentally supress their role. There are no "good" Gods in Lovecraft after all, no counterweight, we are all the Old Ones' playthings.

This sorta ties into Heart Of Darkness in a weird way: critique of Western whites believing they are civilized acheived through having the punchline be "actually you're a savage like the rest of them"; the problematic aspect of that being they take the idea of "savages" at face value in the first place.

Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 5 October 2017 13:58 (six years ago) link

he definitely thinks that civilisation -- nice as it perhaps is for some -- is a colossal delusion: ditto sanity

mark s, Thursday, 5 October 2017 14:02 (six years ago) link

Some people exaggerate his nihilism (this is possibly because Ligotti taken that aspect and ran with it) but I think it's true that there's this HPL gradual realisation that it's not just the outer regions are wrong, but everything is tainted and hopeless.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 5 October 2017 14:29 (six years ago) link

Another reason for controversies: as fragile and defensive as some Lovecraftians are, some are just kind of exasperated by these arguments and that exasperation can be mistaken for reactionary suppression of discussion.

There have been a ton of thinkpieces, most of which don't do enough research, which Joshi will pounce on (he's one of the very few people to read all the remaining thousands of letters that let you into HPL's thought process). Add to this the current tendency for beginners to pretend they are experts (non-French speakers on every side of the argument who acted like they'd been reading Charlie Hebdo for years) and imagine the storm of thinkpieces Joshi will be riding if a popular screen adaptation happens.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 5 October 2017 14:50 (six years ago) link

These books are huge, expensive and there's many yet to come
https://www.hippocampuspress.com/h.p-lovecraft/collected-letters?zenid=3qivn2fp2pv7lsp195cd2uonn5

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 5 October 2017 14:54 (six years ago) link

nameless ancient hideousness to the web design there

mark s, Thursday, 5 October 2017 14:59 (six years ago) link

Haha, it's one of my favourite publishers and Joshi's work for them represents the bulk or my respect for him. He seems to be involved in some way with most of their books.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:04 (six years ago) link

Yeah, there's a real feeling amongst some younger progressives that everything pre-2000 (in any medium, really) is just a swamp of bigotry

lol this is the dumbest shit

Οὖτις, Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:14 (six years ago) link

Sorry to keep adding bits but there is a bunch of things that added to the feeling that HPL's racism is still dangerous.

-Occasionally get occasional far right people around weird fiction community. A couple have been banned from Ligotti forum.
-Nick Land is a Lovecraft nut.
-David A Riley was for years quite a prominent person in UK horror and Weird Tales kinda stuff. It was known for years that he was a former national front member but he was more recently outed as still being a nationalist and apparently he agreed with a terrorist attack. He is still creating controversy because some people still associate with him and there's been pressure to boycott anything to do with him.
-After World Fantasy dropped their Lovecraft award bust, a guy from counter currents made his own version for nazis.
-The Puppies (the gamergate of speculative fiction) defend HPL.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 5 October 2017 19:29 (six years ago) link

I often find myself wondering how much of horror fandom is composed of racist/far-right types.

this is ridcolus (Old Lunch), Thursday, 5 October 2017 19:35 (six years ago) link

If we're just talking books and not films and music, there is actually very little far right presence in horror compared to science fiction, which has the biggest far right gathering (usually very military orientated) and these guys often don't have much fondness for horror.

There is apparently a lot of aspiring and self-published writers of misogynistic rape fantasies and perhaps they take up some horror convention and online space but I don't see these guys much.

Some say horror writers are generally nicer because they're always confronting their dark side. Sounds kinda bullshit but who knows?

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 5 October 2017 21:38 (six years ago) link

mark fisher (mentioned a little upthread) was nick land's protégé in the mid-90s and they were certainly still chums in the early 00s -- but at some point from a more or less shared position (of cyber-futurist nihilism) for want of a better description mark started travelling definitively (but genuinely) left, while land went (further) right. one thing they continued to share was a high regard for lovecraft

(the speculative realism group in philosophy also seem to use lovecraft as a kind of exemplary touchstone: i think most of them -- tho not all -- are leftish: graham harman certainly published for zer0)

mark s, Friday, 6 October 2017 12:52 (six years ago) link

s/b (of cyber-futurist nihilism, for want of a better description)

mark s, Friday, 6 October 2017 12:52 (six years ago) link

I heard that Land went on Cthuloid rants, did he have a phase of believing the stuff was real? He seems genuinely nuts.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 6 October 2017 13:04 (six years ago) link

i've seen ppl discussing his book fanged noumena in terms of the last stages of amphetamine psychosis (tho others say some of it is very funny) (i guess these aren't mutually contradictory) (also i think it was actually written before his full swing into towards the neo-reactionary)

i haven't read him and probably won't: i did one see him and sadie plant deliver a joint paper in the form of a gary numen-esque robotic performance -- it was bad not good

mark s, Friday, 6 October 2017 13:25 (six years ago) link

nuMAN

mark s, Friday, 6 October 2017 13:25 (six years ago) link

What variety of racist is he?

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 6 October 2017 13:47 (six years ago) link

my poorly informed guess: lovecraftian

but i haven't read anything by him, especially anything recent

mark s, Friday, 6 October 2017 14:29 (six years ago) link

lol did you mean numan?

mark s, Friday, 6 October 2017 14:34 (six years ago) link

an excellent ilxor writes HPL-inspired stuff. but i don't think he comes to this thread.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/25469506-cthulhu-fhtagn

scott seward, Friday, 6 October 2017 16:27 (six years ago) link

i always mean to read a lot of that olde-tymey weird stuff but i never do. i've got a bunch of it at home. i need some 19th century malady or something so that i am in bed for months. THEN i'll read it all. i haven't even read that much poe. too much SF to get to!

scott seward, Friday, 6 October 2017 16:36 (six years ago) link

i did enjoy that steve tem book i read though! deadfall hotel. that was definitely a cool fever dream. and i do think that would make a good netflix show...

i kinda bought that by accident though.

scott seward, Friday, 6 October 2017 16:38 (six years ago) link

He strikes again! Includes review of the Carson story.
http://stjoshi.org/review_lockhart.html

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 6 October 2017 17:15 (six years ago) link

Not sure I knew that this paper was available on line, don't think it was linked to before, found it pretty interesting when I took the book it was in out of the library several years ago: http://elms.faculty.ucdavis.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/98/2014/07/2000-Painwise-in-Space-single-space.pdf

Commandolin Wind (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 11 October 2017 02:12 (six years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.