Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Posting-Version: version B 2.10.1 6/24/83; site druri.UUCP Path: utzoo!watmath!clyde!cbosgd!ihnp4!drutx!druri!dht From: dht@druri.UUCP (Davis Tucker) Newsgroups: net.sf-lovers Subject: THE PROBLEMS OF SCIENCE FICTION TODAY, PART X (FINIS) Message-ID: <1166@druri.UUCP> Date: Thu, 19-Sep-85 17:28:09 EDT Article-I.D.: druri.1166 Posted: Thu Sep 19 17:28:09 1985 Date-Received: Fri, 20-Sep-85 06:11:49 EDT Organization: AT&T Information Systems Laboratories, Denver Lines: 170 THE PROBLEMS OF SCIENCE FICTION TODAY PART X: A Prescription For The Future by Davis Tucker _______________________________________________________________________________ Yes, science fiction has problems. Everything does. Some are serious, some are trivial, albeit irritating (such as my pet peeve about stupid puns, especially in titles). The past nine installments didn't even scratch the surface, but I hope that at the very least they stirred some serious thinking about whether or not these problems can be solved, or if they are problems at all. No one who is interested in science fiction should accept complacency, or begin to pat himself or herself on the back for a genre well done. It's very easy to get in a rut, and very difficult to get out of one. But a valid point can be raised against these essays, that they have been soley concerned with illum- inating the problems of science fiction, not with possible remedies. The ques- tion remains - "What must be done"? We gain nothing in moving forward by extolling our virtues. We must eradicate our faults and our weaknesses, ruthlessly, or we must accept them and live with them. Ignoring the problems that are in science fiction, or acting as if they're strengths, will only lead to further degradation of the field. Close your eyes and imagine bookshelves of Hobbits and rayguns and magic swords and slave wenches and computer nerds and one-dimensional personalities. Imagine Robert Asprin (or whomever you would like to substitute) as the guiding light for fantasy writers of the 21st century, and Spider Robinson as the new Isaac Asimov (okay, it *is* a step up, but not much). In other words, take a moment to extrapolate the field of science fiction, which spends so much of its energy on extrapolation. What will science fiction be like in twenty-five years? Will it even exist? What form will it take, and how can we influence that form now, so that it will improve? Even the most diehard Star Trek fan will agree that the genre could stand some improvement. But what is that improvement to be? Some would have the field move strictly back to its roots, to the Great Idea and hard science and predictions. Others would have it move into the mind and the surreal, become experimental in all ways, and cast off the chains of its past. Both are doctrinaire and dogmatic. What is important, most important to the continued survival and flourishing of science fiction is that the quality of the writing improve. Good writing can be about anything; great writing could probably be about nothing - not that this is necessarily admirable or desirable. Hoary plot devices must be discarded, wherever they occur. Bad dialogue needs to be weeded out with napalm. Overused characters need to be put out to pasture, right, Gandalf? A breath of fresh air is needed, in the sense that the field has become too resistant to experimentation, especially by new authors. Old authors need to draw on their familiarity with the genre to branch out; if anyone has leeway to experiment and expand his or her literary horizons, it's an established writer. Science fiction has an amazing resiliency with this sort of thing. Heinlein, for all his faults, went out on a limb with "Stranger In A Strange Land" and it paid off. Silverberg's renascence with "Majipoor Chronicles" and "Lord Valentine's Castle" is another example. Gene Wolfe, though he still is a "new" author, surprised everyone with the popularity of "The Book Of The New Sun". The readership of science fiction, fans and casual readers, need to consciously try out something different now and then, or they will ignore the greatness that is at the very heart of the concept of science fiction, the willingness to experiment and attempt more than seems possible. There was a time in the field, in the late Sixties, during the days of the New Wave, when discovering a new author, a new way of writing, and a new slant was very important to many readers. Now, unfortunately, it seems that too many are satisfied with sequels and trilogies and fluff-filled fantasy by formula authors. Quality of writing *seems* to be running a distand third behind predictable characters and fast- moving plots. Great writing, quality writing, does not mean fancy sentences and big words and heavy symbolism. Writing is not an end in itself, and neither is it merely a means of telling a story. Quality writing means attention to details like plot twists and avoiding loose ends, characters who live and breathe and talk like they were people, not cartoon characters. Real people don't expostulate for pages, like Jubal Harshaw or Lazarus Long, and real people aren't arche- typical heroes and villains. Quality writing means both a simultaneous ability to make the reader totally forget he is reading, if he chooses, or to allow him to realize how much the act of reading is working on his experience. The basics of building believable human beings and believable situations and in- tricate plots and detailed societies have been around for years, and are well defined and understood by most authors, be they science fiction or mainstream. James Clavell worked just as hard to make "Shogun" believable as Herbert did with "Dune". Motivation, of a society or an individual or a destiny, requires some kind of internal consistency, unless the novel is one that is deliberate- ly inconsistent, such as some of Robert Sheckley's or R. A. Lafferty's work, or much meta-fiction. Plot resolution also requires care and especially in science fiction, that the author avoid the many cheap devices that science fiction's imaginative freedom has strewn in his path to entice him from the straight and narrow road of correct and consistent plotting. Quality is *not* that elusive, it is not unattainable by even a merely competent writer; we do not ask that all books written be "Heart Of Darkness". It *is* work, and it *is* personal pride, and it is always easier to go half-way than the whole distance, in writing as in any effort. But the extra work required yields a much more satisfactory result. I'm not saying that every science fiction novel should be like "The Book Of The New Sun". But the quality that is so apparent in that work should be a goal for every science fiction novel. Sensitivity to subject matter and a refusal to take the easy out in a plot situation should be encouraged. Puns should be outlawed for ten years until the next James Joyce appears and decides he wants to write science fiction. As a concrete suggestion, I think more works by South American surrealist authors, of whom there are many, should be published in science fiction magazines and by science fiction publishing houses - and don't condemn it as boring literature, or highbrow, because much of it is exuberant, interesting, and well-written. Hard science fiction needs to take a long look at its traditional insensitivity to its characters and its dialogue. Exposition, so necessary to science fiction, needs to become better integrated into story lines. It gets tiring to read page after page of characters talking at each other, explaining their society or some wonderful concept or marvelous invention. The sort of thing Gardner Dozois called "The Great Steam Grommet Works Of The Future Travelog", where the reader gets a guided tour of the marvelous future. These sorts of things can be revealed during the course of the story, in subtle and less obtrusive ways. Science fiction could use a better understanding of its symbolism, of the ideas and metaphors which are being manipulated to provide resonance and meaning beyond what is written. The field needs to indulge in that great imaginative sweep that is afforded it, like no other genre, that freedom to say and do and create anything. No other literary field can send a man back in time to confront his father, no other field can turn a man into a machine, no other field can destroy planets and minds and entire global societies. These situations are wrought with frightening symbolic implications, deep psychological conflicts, and incredible mythic resonances. They are filled with enormous potential for exciting new directions (as cliched as that phrase is, in science fiction). Mining and exploring the vast reaches of the genre's freedom of expression will require effort, and discipline, and willingness to experiment, much more so than science fiction has done in its past. I love science fiction. We all do, I think. And we want to see it improve, and expand, and capture more readers, and pay its authors more money, and to mature and grow up from its beginnings without ignoring its past. If I have been harsh on its failings, it is only because of the hope I hold for its awesome potential as literature. I myself would like to see a time when science fiction is no longer considered merely a "genre", but a large part of the literary scene, as biographies and spy novels are considered now. When the field becomes viable for any and every writer who chooses to write science fiction, when the definition of what is and is not science fiction is of clinical and critical unimportance. There is no field in Western literature which can afford as much freedom and imagination and room for great writing as science fiction. There is no artform today which has so much unexplored potential, not music, not art, not photography. I honestly believe that science fiction stands poised at a very important crossroads in its development, a point at which its popular appeal has risen to new heights, where it is finally gaining some grudging acceptance in academic circles, and where it is finally reaching that stage of maturity from which great art in any artform can arise. Events in art and literature often move at a snail's pace for years, and then there will be a sudden, intense flowering of genius. I think science fiction is on the brink of that heady precipice of greatness, and I want nothing more than for it to leap over it unafraid and with all the necessary skills to maintain itself as viable and popular. Remember that no artform can remain static and survive, and even if it moves in some direction, that not all of those directions will guarantee any survival. Poetry used to be widely read and published and appreciated, as little as 50 years ago, but it is fast becoming, unfortunately, a dead artform for a number of reasons. It may still resurrect itself, but the lesson is clear. Classical music is hardly being composed at all anymore - you could count on one hand the number of new composers with a substantial body of work being performed by orchestras around the world. Science fiction *can* survive, I think it *must* survive, but it needs to take a long, hard look at its accepted tenets and its preconceptions and re-evaluate its role. And with luck and hard work it can become much, much more than what it is today. I think we all have enjoyed the discussions that have been spawned by these essays, from substantial insights into the nature of artistic appreciation to spleen-venting, from impassioned, reasoned defenses of favorite works to investigations of the author-reader relationship, from agreements and disagree- ments to the consensus that is sometime reached. I hope no one has found these essays offensive, once the dust settled, and I hope no one thinks that I have no respect for his or her opinion, for all that I may have disagreed with it. It's been fun. Brought to you by Super Global Mega Corp .com