What if science fiction is a worldview instead of a genre

Shaun Duke raises an interesting point by saying that science fiction has in many ways become a supergenre. Shaun began thinking about this during a discussion with Maureen Kincaid Speller and Paul Kincaid about what science fiction "is," a discussion in which Kincaid said thinking of SF as a genre in the narrative sense is not an accurate application of the term "genre."

Cue the Shaun-Duke-summarizing-and-melding-with-Paul-Kincaid quote:

Unlike romance or crime, there is nothing unique to the narrative practice of sf that can be separated from everything else. This might explain, for example, why there has been so much discussion about the nature of sf as a cross-pollinating genre – crossovers being so regular an occurrence that one would be hard pressed to find an sf text which does not cross over into other generic forms.

Shaun then suggests that people consider science fiction as one of the "supergenres" alongside realistic fiction and anti-realistic fiction, underneath of which rest the traditional genres of historical novels, crime stories, romances, fantasies, and so on. "These supergenres would not necessarily define the genres beneath them, but they would suggest a relationship between genres that moves beyond narrative practice, but never quite leaves it behind. A fantasy novel might be as much historical as it is anti-realist; the former is a narrative practice, while the latter is a conceptual 'game.'"

Shaun makes some fascinating points in his essay, which I suggest people go and read. I also look forward to reading Shaun's future exploration of this topic.

However, I wonder if Shaun doesn't take his thought experiment far enough. Perhaps instead of even speaking of science fiction as a genre or supergenre, we should instead speak of SF and other established genres as viewpoints toward seeing the world. 

After all, fiction itself is a worldview, a way of saying that certain types of stories have not truly happened and likely will never happen. The "fiction" worldview allows people to approach fictional stories with a different frame of mind than the viewpoints we have when approaching historical texts, or memoirs, or poetry, or even real life.

And within the viewpoint of fiction rest more individualized views of what fiction can accomplish. These viewpoints—our traditional genres like fantasy, horror, romance and so on—essential set up people to understand what they're about to experience. Just as the human mind must learn to interpret the sensory inputs we receive from our eyes and ears—allowing us to know that this image we're seeing is a tree, and that buzzing sound we're hearing is a bee—so too must people learn to understand the fictional stories they experience. Hence the existence of genres, which help people understand the fictional motifs and themes and beliefs they are about to encounter.

Now I know there's more to genre than merely a worldview—there's also a marketing aspect which publishers and authors use to sell books, along with social communities of readers connected with each genre. However, I think this worldview theory is still a useful way to understand part of why genres exist.

And if it's true that genre should in part be understood as a literary viewpoint, this would also help explain why science fiction is in such decline.

During Readercon earlier this year I spoke briefly with a well-known author whose fiction, while incorporating many aspects of SF, is not usually considered a part of the science fiction genre. (Yes, I'm being vague, but this was a personal conversation and I don't intend to name the author.) When I asked the author why he thought fantasy had eclipsed the science fiction genre in recent years, he said that "Unlike with the fantasy genre, science fiction is still trying to discover what it wants to say." 

This quote struck me because I'm fascinated with why so few people these days read science fiction.  But what if the problem with SF isn't that it merely doesn't know what it wants to say to 21st century audiences (although I believe that is part of the problem). What if the worldview of science fiction, centered around technological change and futurism and humanity's place in the universe, no longer strikes many people as being unique to the genre because this worldview has become common among a sizable portion of humanity.

In short, what if SF's worldview is now the defacto worldview of so many people living through the technological changes of the 21 century that the genre seems rather tame and boring?

I don't know if this is true, but it's what I'm contemplating today. But if there's any truth in this, then if science fiction is to again become relevant to people the way our genre views the world—and our genre's place in our fictional understandings of life—must change.

My GenCon Writers Symposium schedule

Going to this year's GenCon? Then swing by the GenCon Writer's Symposium, which is held right upstairs from the main exhibition hall. Your GenCon badge gets you in for free to the Symposium's more than 140 hours of programming by more than 50 authors, including myself.

My schedule of events includes:

Friday, Aug. 15 at 2 pm
Writer's Craft track: Writing Amazing Short Stories 
with John Helfers, Toni L. P. Kelner, Jim Lowder, and Catherine Shaffer.
Learn what makes a great short story great, what types of stories work in short form, and tips for crafting amazing short stories of your own

Friday, Aug. 15 at 5 pm
Business of Writing track: Selling Your Stories
with Elizabeth Vaughan, Carrie Harris, Scott Westerfeld, and Maurice Broaddus.
Learn how to sell a finished story, get advice on choosing a market based on the length or genre of your story, and learn to improve the chance that the person you send your story to read it!

Saturday, Aug. 16 at 1 pm
Publishing track: Traditional Publishing
with John Helfers, Erik Scott de Bie, Saladin Ahmed, and Jim Minz.
Find out what it takes to get published by the big publishing houses, learn the advantages of going this route, and discover the challenges 
inherent in this path to publication

Saturday, Aug. 16 at 6 pm
Writer's Craft track: Short Fiction Plotting
with Don Bingle, Catherine Shaffer, Dylan Birtolo, and Christopher Rowe.
Learn to shape a plot when you have less than 10,000 words to tell the entire tale! It takes a special set of skills to forge a plot that works in 
short fiction, and we'll tell you how to do it

Sunday, Aug. 17 from 11 am to 1 pm
Read and critique session
with Elizabeth Vaughan, David B. Coe, and Maxwell Alexander Drake.
This session gives attendees the opportunity to read something they've written and to hear instant feedback from published authors. If you stop by this session and share a little of your fiction I'll not only give feedback but also suggestions on where to submit the story.

If you see me at the Symposium, be sure to say hello. I love talking with people.

 

Like any human creation, Amazon can do both good and bad

This morning I wrote about a desperate-sounding email Amazon sent to all their Kindle Direct Authors in response to Douglas Preston and other authors who are tired of being abused by the online giant.

I've now heard from a number of people who have defended Amazon, and others who wondered why I don't accept Amazon's belief that lower ebook prices will be a boon for all authors.

Understand this—Amazon was created by humans and, as with any of our creations, can be used for both good and evil. For example, I grew up in an area with a bad library system and very few booksellers, none of which carried an in-depth stock of the books I desperately wanted to read. Because of that I loved going to big cities like Atlanta or New York where I could find independent booksellers who actually carried, you know, a ton of books.

I know my experience mirrors that of many people both in the U.S. and around the world. And for people like us Amazon is a true gift from the literary gods, enabling readers to have at their fingertips a sizable portion of the world's books.

Because this I've been sympathetic to people who both complained that Amazon was driving their local booksellers out of business, and to people who said they loved Amazon. I've seen the world from both perspectives, so to speak. 

As an author, my Amazon viewpoint is similarly complex. I appreciate that Amazon has helped my fiction be read by people around the world. However, I wouldn't have found any readers without traditional magazine publishers like Interzone and Asimov's Science Fiction, which took a chance on my short stories. But I also know that Asimov's has seen its circulation grow in recent years thanks in part to the exposure the magazine's electronic edition receives on the Kindle.

Despite all this, the reason I'm opposed to Amazon's current stance toward book publishers is because I don't see any good coming to authors if Amazon becomes the world's defacto publishing monopoly. Yes, Amazon has done a lot of good for authors and often pays authors higher percentages than traditional publishers. But Amazon is in this for Amazon's sake—as are almost all businesses—and I have no doubt that if Amazon is able dictate terms to traditional publishers they'll eventually dictate not-so-great terms to all authors.

There's no going back to how the publishing and bookselling world used to be, nor would I want that to happen. But that doesn't mean I want any one corporation to have ultimate power over which books are published, how they are priced, and how much authors are paid.

Amazon feels the fear

A new email from Amazon's Kindle Direct Publishing sneaked into my inbox this morning. I say "sneaked" because who sends out a promotional or marketing email at 4 am on a Saturday morning.

The answer: A company beginning to panic.

The letter is obviously in response to the letter signed by Douglas Preston and more than 900 other authors who are tired of being abused by Amazon. In the letter Amazon compares ebooks to the creation of paperback books before World War II and how that invention shook up the publishing industry. They also beg their Kindle Direct authors to email Hachette CEO, Michael Pietsch and demand Hachette remove authors from the middle of these negotiations.

You can read the letter here.

I'm not going to dissect the letter, which contains a rehashing of Amazon's standard talking points. Instead, consider the timing. Amazon releases this letter early on a Saturday morning when most of their customers are asleep.

My guess is the Preston letter, which will appear in the Sunday New York Times but has already gained massive amounts of publicity, has them in a panic.

Amazon is used to being the friends of both authors and readers and investors. Now two of those groups have partly turned against them.

So they strike back with a 4 am email.

Yeah, they're feeling the fear.

We hate your genre—except when we write it

The news for On Spec Magazine is bad—the Canada Council for the Arts denied their grant application for 2015 because "the quality of writing remained low." As On Spec's managing editor Diane Walton explains, this is flat-out wrong and merely the rationalization the Council used to remove funding from a genre publication. Walton says the magazine is exploring alternate funding mechanisms and asking for support.

This appears to a case of bias against the speculative fiction genre (a view shared by Michal Wojcik and others). My belief in this is based not only on the fact that On Spec continually publishes high quality fiction but because I've witnessed first-hand the literary snobbery and beliefs which appears to have doomed On Spec's application.

You see, a while back I received a Minnesota State Arts Board Fellowship, which at the time was a very nice monetary grant awarded to individual artists (they've since discontinued the program). I won the award with a story which, while containing genre elements, easily passed for the types of stories at home in the Mississippi Review and the Beloit Fiction Journal. Since I'd published works in those exact literary magazines, and ran a literary journal called storySouth, the Arts Board judges no doubt saw me as one of their own.

I'm not merely making this assumption—I know this is truth because a few years later I ran into one of the judges who'd decided I was fellowship worthy. This person introduced herself to me, praised my writing, and asked what I was writing these days. 

When I mentioned science fiction stories, she promptly informed me that if she'd known I was going to write those types of stories she wouldn't have be voted for my fellowship.

Ouch. Burn. How dare I take their official literary imprinteur and use it to write that nasty genre stuff.

Of course, the irony is that major literary authors from Cormac McCarthy and Toni Morrison to Michael Chabon and Junot Díaz regularly dip their toes into the genre pool. But that's evidently okay with our world's self-appointed literary elite.

I now understand that the distinctions between genres—including between the so-called "literary" genre and all other types of fiction—don't matter as much as many people believe. Great fiction can exist in any genre or type of writing, just as bad writing also exists across all genres.

It's too bad the Canada Council for the Arts and many other lovers of literature don't understand this.