Neace makes a couple of good points, contemporary fiction has always been wildly popular no matter the time period and there are plenty of people who have trouble reading “Classic” literature because they don’t necessarily know how to read it, but there are many things she writes that I disagree with.
“Four-letter words are more entertaining.” There are plenty of people who disagree with this. Sometimes sex and swearing in books is really just distracting and does nothing to further the plot or develop the character. Often writers seem to include them for the sake of having them in the story, rather than for any literary purpose. They have a character shout out a curse word when something goes wrong because ‘it’s realistic’ when not having the character say anything would be just as effective.
And let’s be honest: there’s plenty of sex in Classic literature. Many of them, yes, were poetic about it, and for many it happened “off-stage”, but it was all over the place. Lots of cheating on spouses and illegitimate children, reputations ruined and marriages destroyed because someone had extra-marital sex. And there’s a surprising amount of explicit erotica from over the years as well (sex blogs have nothing on some of these writers).
“They [modern writers] are open about things in a way that would have been scandalous hundreds of years ago. They confront their demons, and, in doing so, make readers feel as though they can do the same. It is easier to be inspired by a familiar situation.”
Neace also reminds us that there are seven basic plots that writers have been using over and over, and I am the last person who would ever suggest that someone can’t tell the same story again in their own unique voice, but to suggest that a reader cannot connect to a piece of literature that explores the same themes as a modern novel because it doesn’t address the same exact issue a modern reader is dealing with is absurd. A modern reader who has moved to a new area staggeringly different from where he or she is from is still going to be able to get something out of The Witch of Blackbird Pond; someone struggling with his or her identity (no matter what that includes) is still going to be able to understand Pierre Bezukhov and Natasha Rostova while they try to figure out their place in the world; a kid being betrayed by a friend for the first time is going to be able to identify with Catherine Moreland discovering that there are people who don’t have other’s best interests at heart; a mischievous youth is going to root for Tom Sawyer and the youngest of four sisters is absolutely going to understand why Amy throws Jo’s book in the fire and that she was wrong to do it.
Just as there are only seven or so plots in literature there are only so many themes being written about; and the reason a book becomes a Classic in the first place is because it explores one or more of these universal themes. Just because a book isn’t about a teen lost in the underbelly of society, a world of sex, drugs, cutting and eating disorders doesn’t mean a person in similar circumstances won’t be able to identify with a character who drinks tea with her overbearing aunt or is the governess to some really snotty children or a girl who stole the shoes of a dead woman after she killed her with her house. These stories may have been written many years ago by writers who never heard of television, computers or the Internet, but what they’ve written about has been the same for thousands of years.
“Women’s lib and civil rights made the literary landscape more interesting.”
And what she means by this is the Dead White Males aren’t the only ones writing anymore. And what Neace writes is true: the disenfranchised, non-whites, and women often didn’t have a voice in Western Literature and it wasn’t until the 17th century or so that women were writing and by the 19th century some minorities were getting their stories told in America (did you know the first best seller written in America was by a black woman?).
But this doesn’t mean DWMs weren’t able to tell stories of the poor or minority. Thomas Hardy wrote about a girl who was raped (in a time when “rape” didn’t exist) by her cousin, had his baby and even though it died, poor babe, she was unable to avoid the stigma that went along with her situation. She was considered ‘promiscuous’ and was burdened with shame of it for the rest of her life. (How much has society really changed?) Nathaniel Hawthorne (who lamented the “scribbling women” writers of his time) wrote a story about a woman ostracized for committing adultery and the years she spends quietly outside society raising her daughter, bearing her punishment for her crimes while the man involved is never publicly punished, but punishes himself in secret. (Ok, so that one is more about the Puritans than it is women’s issues, but stil...) Harriet Beecher Stowe set out to be somewhat objective-yet-heavily-abolitionist in Uncle Tom’s Cabin, people hate this book, but she shows all types:good and bad white people and good and bad slaves. John Steinbeck is considered “the Classics” and all his books seem to be about the poor underclass, both displaying and glorifying their lives and times.
Also: what is considered Classic is constantly changing. Society and academics alike have moved on from the “traditional” English and American literary canon and have broadened their horizons. ”Classic” literature has begun to include more women and not white authors as time moves on and the number of books that “stand the test of time” has grown larger and is pulling from a more diverse field.
Most authors will never have their works labeled under “Classics”. Many of those authors will be read and enjoyed by their contemporaries. Many of their novels will be thoroughly helpful to readers going through the same struggles as the characters in their books, this is true just as Neace writes, but these same readers are also capable of reading something off the “Classics” shelf, identifying with the characters and situations on the pages and learning a little about life and human nature and themselves.
But all of this is irrelevant when you realize Neace’s actual thesis isn’t “Don’t Read the Classics”, but “Forcing books on readers before they’re ready for them is just going to turn them off reading”. This seems to be the real point Neace wants to make and is a real issue English teachers and parents ought to be addressing. You’ll survive life if you never read Silas Marner, but it wouldn’t it be nice if people weren’t turned off of it simply because it’s old?
Post makes absolute sense to me — there are plenty of names I won’t consider for my hypothetical future children because of books I’ve read:
[‘Henry’ - a charmer, but never faithful; ‘Jill’ - a grumpy, lonely girl full of teen angst; ‘Caroline’ - manipulative and bitchy; ‘Catherine’ - vain and insecure and willing to trail a man who doesn’t love her for security purposes; ‘Daisy’ - vapid silly airhead].
But my beef with this post is one of her choices in particular: “Rebecca. Two-timing, manipulative, and liable to inspire arson.”
I realize my issue is really with Daphne DuMaurier for essentially vilifying my good name, but it still hurts a little. Here’s the thing and while this isn’t proven fact, based on my life experience there’s always at least one Rebecca in a group somewhere. She might be the secretary, she might be the meter maid, she might be the schoolteacher or the barista, but there’s always a Rebecca. And she’s very nearly always super nice and well meaning.
Can you tell what these books are based on their second lines?
By Cassandra Neace on Book Riot — I’m posting this in two places simultaneously
This list is humorously penned and not very far off the mark - or so I thought. Then I scrolled through the comments to see what other people had to add to Neace’s thoughts. I was rather taken aback when I stumbled upon a rather nasty assessment.
A couple actually. A couple of readers didn’t seem to take away what I thought to be Neace’s central points. How I took her piece was the following (because my opinion supersedes everything else?):
1. How YOU feel about what you are reading is more important than what other people think (be it High Literature or YA Fiction or a Trashy Novel).
2. Enthusiasm is contagious.
3. There’s a lot of manufactured drivel out there — it’s true.
4. The book was written to be a book and can be appreciated as a book.
5. Most grocery store books are crap.
6. Publishers pay to get their product seen so they can make money.
7. Well, seven she admits is bitchy.
Overall, I took Neace’s list to be saying that everyone has different tastes and that’s ok. It’s not a universal dictated These Are The Right Books For All, but more of a softer this is how you know you are reading the right books for you (the individual). I don’t think this list deserved the two very bitchy responses it got from a couple of readers (especially the belligerent one).
People get very high handed about things they love, this is something I do often and understand, but there’s no reason to be nasty about it. I have disagreed with articles I’ve read on Book Riot — one written by Cassandra Neace, in fact. It prompted me to write a big long essay in defense of reading the classics and finding an effective way to help students learn to enjoy reading. If she read it, I don’t think Neace felt I was attacking her personally, just what she had written (discourse, people, discourse!) I don’t believe I called her stupid or ignorant or narrow-minded. I don’t think I made any comment on Neace-as-a-person whatsoever. I merely wrote my own counter-arguments to the points she was making.
Which leads me to an Open Letter to the Belligerent Commenter:
Dear Belligerent Commenter:
In regards to your comments on a recent Book Riot article I would like to say that I am flabbergasted that you feel that you are entitled to make these comments in regards to the author of the article. Disagree with her points, by all means (which upon multiple perusals I don’t think you actually do…), but to attack the writer herself is the basest form of argument and has no place in literary discourse.
Calling the writer “narrow-minded” and “an elitist snob” and “full of crap” is uncouth; you were rude and impolite and for that I think you ought to apologize. You are not entitled to attack her in this way; and certainly not because she holds an opinion that differs from yours.
Personally I think you’re entire response to Neace’s list was entirely out of proportion. It was, to use your words, narrow-minded and snobby. And yet you make the same points as Neace. While you think Twilight was “shitty”, you don’t want to impinge anyone else’s right to enjoy that particular novel. I think, if read a little more closely you’ll find that Neace feels exactly the same way.
Sincerely,
Bex
I liked Neace’s list. I think Neace’s contributions to Book Riot are valuable. She fields a corner that I think gets neglected sometimes by people-who-love-to-read: she champions for everyone else. The others, the people who don’t love to read quite the same way we do. She wants to help encourage these others to read more and to learn to enjoy reading and that is wonderful. In my acquaintance that’s Most People and it’s largely due to schooling. School killed any hope for a love of reading and that’s the saddest thing. Keep up the good work, Cassandra.
- They know more than you do… about everything.
- They often use words that you secretly have to look up later.
- They have magical cards that get them books for free.
- They speak the names of people whom you’ve never met; who live in different countries, who lived in other centuries.
- Their purse/bag/briefcase is always a bit heavier than yours (which you later find out is equivalent to the weight of a book).
- They know the endings to many of the newest movies before they’ve seen them.
- They give you a sympathetic smile when you mention that the last book you read was two summers ago… and it had a half naked man (or woman) on the front.
- Their bookshelves are covered in books instead of pictures of them.
- They have bookshelves.
- They do things that you wouldn’t do, such as reading lists about how to spot a reader.
As much as I like this list numbers 1&2 manage to make me uncomfortable. I’ve had people tell me that they have to google things I reference while we’re chatting online and that they often don’t know the words I use in casual conversation. I’ve had two friends have an entire conversation (right in front of me) about how they never know what I’m talking about because I reference things they don’t know and use vocabulary they’re not familiar with; I don’t think they mean anything by it, but it always manages to make me feel really badly. It’s always said in this way that makes me feel like I’m doing something wrong or discourteous. And to have them laughing about it, with me right there, like it’s no big deal sort of hurts. It means (or implies) that we’re not communicating, these friends and I, when we talk and that they don’t care.
Watch what happens when Jodi Chromey attempts to reconstruct the random bits of poetry she can’t seem to forget.
Random Bits of Poetry That Have Lodged in My Brain
(via bookriot)