Sometimes a work attains classic status through inertia or because of their influential nature, rather than quality (which is often subjective).
Often subjective?
Sometimes a work attains classic status through inertia or because of their influential nature, rather than quality (which is often subjective).
Those aren't really objective. One man's Finnegan's Wake is another man's garbage.Aside from standards of writing,
Actually my respect for Shakespeare increased after school, seeing him performed rather than read out by spotty teens, and the depth of his story telling (especially in light of what we were saying above about literature when it was contemporary). For a good example, watch Ian McKellen's 'Richard III', set in a 1930s fascist England, it's incredibly well acted (it has an amazing cast), and resonates with the power of the language. Had a similar discussion about WS this weekend in my SF reading group at the local library. For a SF group, we talk a lot about history, religion, archaeology, literature and food.Most people consider Shakespeare the greatest writer in the history of Western civilization, but only because they were taught to think that in school.
Actually my respect for Shakespeare increased after school, seeing him performed rather than read out by spotty teens, and the depth of his story telling (especially in light of what we were saying above about literature when it was contemporary). For a good example, watch Ian McKellen's 'Richard III', set in a 1930s fascist England, it's incredibly well acted (it has an amazing cast), and resonates with the power of the language. Had a similar discussion about WS this weekend in my SF reading group at the local library. For a SF group, we talk a lot about history, religion, archaeology, literature and food.Most people consider Shakespeare the greatest writer in the history of Western civilization, but only because they were taught to think that in school.![]()
Of course, but there are still standards of writing, otherwise Plan 9 From Outer Space would be on the same level as 2001: A Space Odyssey. That doesn't mean bad stuff can't be entertaining....Those aren't really objective. One man's Finnegan's Wake is another man's garbage.Aside from standards of writing,
Oh, I love Shakespeare, but he's definitely overrated. But the point is that most people think that Shakespeare is the greatest writer not because they've read him or because they know anything about writing, but simply because it's accepted as a given in our culture.Actually my respect for Shakespeare increased after school, seeing him performed rather than read out by spotty teens, and the depth of his story telling (especially in light of what we were saying above about literature when it was contemporary). For a good example, watch Ian McKellen's 'Richard III', set in a 1930s fascist England, it's incredibly well acted (it has an amazing cast), and resonates with the power of the language. Had a similar discussion about WS this weekend in my SF reading group at the local library. For a SF group, we talk a lot about history, religion, archaeology, literature and food.Most people consider Shakespeare the greatest writer in the history of Western civilization, but only because they were taught to think that in school.![]()
Of course, but there are still standards of writing, otherwise Plan 9 From Outer Space would be on the same level as 2001: A Space Odyssey. That doesn't mean bad stuff can't be entertaining....Those aren't really objective. One man's Finnegan's Wake is another man's garbage.Aside from standards of writing,
Oh, I love Shakespeare, but he's definitely overrated. But the point is that most people think that Shakespeare is the greatest writer not because they've read him or because they know anything about writing, but simply because it's accepted as a given in our culture.Actually my respect for Shakespeare increased after school, seeing him performed rather than read out by spotty teens, and the depth of his story telling (especially in light of what we were saying above about literature when it was contemporary). For a good example, watch Ian McKellen's 'Richard III', set in a 1930s fascist England, it's incredibly well acted (it has an amazing cast), and resonates with the power of the language. Had a similar discussion about WS this weekend in my SF reading group at the local library. For a SF group, we talk a lot about history, religion, archaeology, literature and food.Most people consider Shakespeare the greatest writer in the history of Western civilization, but only because they were taught to think that in school.![]()
why does David Brin need me to know he has a PhD?
Oh, I love Shakespeare, but he's definitely overrated. But the point is that most people think that Shakespeare is the greatest writer not because they've read him or because they know anything about writing, but simply because it's accepted as a given in our culture.
As I said, he's great, and he was certainly innovative, as a lot of writers have been, but anybody with a reputation as the greatest writer in history-- or, worse, as the guy who "invented thinking," as one of his worshipers would have us believe-- can't help but be overrated. I believe the term is "Bardolatry."Sorry, I've gotta put my two cents worth in here, but overrated? The man basically invented self-analytical fictional characters. The Greek heroes, and Chaucer's characters are all great fun, and compelling as hell, but none of them question their own existence. No fiction writer I'm aware of ever created characters who questioned themselves, analyzed themselves the way real people do, until Shakespeare. He can't be overrated, because he essentially invented the language of fiction. (It's sort of like accusing Orson Welles or D. W. Griffith of being overrated, when the two of them almost single-handedly invented the language of cinema.)
The man basically invented self-analytical fictional characters. The Greek heroes... and compelling as hell, but none of them question their own existence.
The man basically invented self-analytical fictional characters. The Greek heroes... and compelling as hell, but none of them question their own existence.
Some of Shakespeare's characters certainly do exhibit this analysis - partly a product of the English Renaissance.
But you don't think Oedipus questioned his own existence? I thought his horrific realisation and blindness were overtly about this. He answered the Sphinx's riddle ("man"), only to become a riddle himself.
O wild Kithairon, why was it thy will
To save me? Why not take me quick and kill,
Kill, before ever I could make men know
The thing I am, the thing from which I grow?
Thou dead King, Polybus, thou city wall
Of Corinth, thou old castle I did call
My father's, what a life did ye begin,
What splendour rotted by the worm within,
When ye bred me! O Crossing of the Roads,
O secret glen and dusk of crowding woods,
O narrow footpath creeping to the brink
Where meet the Three! I gave you blood to drink.
Do ye remember? 'Twas my life-blood, hot
From mine own father's heart. Have ye forgot
What deed I did among you, and what new
And direr deed I fled from you to do?
O flesh, horror of flesh!...
You'll notice that he's questioning his fate, which isn't at all the same thing as questioning his own motives, or feelings. All the major Greek tragic characters have a similar speech before they die, and they always ask, essentially, "Why me? Why did fate have to choose me for this horrible role?" There seems to be no room for free will in this questioning, and that makes perfect sense because the Greeks largely didn't believe in free will. Everything is fated. So, sure, they question fate. But they never, ever doubt themselves, their own view of themselves. Without a sense of complete agency, and free will, it would make no sense for a character to question themselves on WHY exactly they are CHOOSING a particular path. Shakespeare's characters are the first major characters, as far as I'm aware, to have that "modern" sense of self-doubt.
^^ There can be no greatest writer. There are too many of them who have been innovative or influential in too many ways. He deserves as much credit as anyone else, but the truth is that he has evolved this reputation through various quirks of history-- if his pals hadn't put together that portfolio, he might not even be known today except by specialized academics.
In that sense, I'm sorry, I still do have to say that, by definition, he cannot be overrated.
In that sense, I'm sorry, I still do have to say that, by definition, he cannot be overrated.
I wouldn't have thought Shakespeare was overrated, but this is, admittedly, prior to reading someone glibly state that he's unquestionably better than all three Greek tragedians and the first writer in the history of fiction to suggest the existance of self-doubt.
So yeah. I'll now concede he can get a bit overvalued.
Euripides is particularly good at probing the line between agency and fate. Off the top of my head in Orestes characters conspire to do something monumentally stupid and the gods abruptly intervene so that the myth can continue the way it's supposed to go, in Iphigenia at Aulis doubt is placed on both the justification of the sacrifice and the godly fallout. Things should not go as they do (killing kids to start wars is kind of bad, justifications for such may be not so cool) and they may not go as they say (the second-hand reportage of Iphigenia being spared slaughter by divine intervention may be a lie to please Clytemnestra).
This is kind of why Euripides gets signalled out for his deus ex machina conclusions - using the gods as a device to let the story reach its expected end, rather than let the characters continue in the direction they were snowballing towards. That's not quite the same as the tragic irony of Sophocles' Oedipus the King, where in attempting to escape his fate Oedipus completes it. Characters have free will and will screw up the carefully prepared script of the gods if they don't keep meddling to let the stories unfold as they should.
These kind of distinctions can make talking of 'the Greeks' and their monolithic belief in fate a kind of misleading way of talking.
The point is, no one person can be the greatest writer.
Many famous writers throughout History have been influential-- many obscure writers have been influential, as well. It's those various quirks of History-- the portfolio, the Renaissance fan club and so forth-- that led to his academic, and therefore popular, status as the greatest. His influence therefore snowballed because of that status, becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy. He's certainly a very good writer who was innovative in his time, but he's just one of many.
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