Results 1 to 20 of 97

Thread: Classic vs Contemporary

Hybrid View

  1. #1

    Post Classic vs Contemporary

    Quote Originally Posted by titania7 View Post
    ...For the most part, as you will notice if you browse my post to the "50 Favorite Books" thread, the books I read are "classics." This is because, from my experience, the writers of the past have a deeper understanding of human nature than the authors of today. I have yet to find writer on a par with Balzac, Dostoevsky, Dickens, or Henry James among contemporary writers.
    Ooh, this sounds like a challenge. I believe I must be your polar opposite as I find the classics a mixed bag. Let's take Dickens for example - I've only read a few but I find them a bit of fun rather than thought provoking. I've had fun trying to figure out The Turn of the Screw and would rate Henry James much higher in intrigue than Charles Dickens, but I wouldn't say that he had a deeper understanding of human nature than, say, Richard Yates.

    And don't get me started on Wuthering Heights. (luckily you didn't mention Emily Bronte).

    Edit (after reading the rest of the thread): I don't recall the first 75 pages of Focault's Pendulum being the difficult ones. I think I got into difficulty somewhere in the middle but ploughed through.
    Last edited by Colette Jones; 03-Jan-2009 at 09:52.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Atlanta, Georgia
    Posts
    1,059

    Italy Re: Umberto Eco: Foucault's Pendulum

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette Jones
    Ooh, this sounds like a challenge. I believe I must be your polar opposite as I find the classics a mixed bag. Let's take Dickens for example - I've only read a few but I find them a bit of fun rather than thought provoking.
    Yes, some of Dickens' novels are quite fun! However, there was certainly nothing "entertaining", in my opinion, about A Tale of Two Cities or Bleak House. For me, both of these novels were quite thought-provoking
    and neither offered me any good laughs.

    Bleak House, for example, is partially narrated by a young woman who is illegitimate, and who, over the course of the novel, becomes badly disfigured by a disease. Surely you couldn't find this amusing? I know I didn't. Then, her mother, who has been blackmailed by a nefarious man who will stop at nothing, runs away and is found dead in a graveyard. Entertainment? I suppose it depends on how you look at it.

    I assume we're talking about the same Charles Dickens, but I daresay we are not talking about the same books.

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette Jones
    I've had fun trying to figure out The Turn of the Screw and would rate Henry James much higher in intrigue than Charles Dickens, but I wouldn't say that he had a deeper understanding of human nature than, say, Richard Yates.
    Henry James is a master of psychological realism. I've never heard Richard Yates referred to as that. However, to make any judgements based merely on The Turn of the Screw would be remiss indeed. Have you read any of James' major novels: The Ambassadors, Wings of the Dove, The Golden Bowl, or The Portrait of the Lady? I haven't read Yates, but I find it impossible to imagine that he could have penned a novel on the same level with one of these books by James.

    If you really want to debate this issue, that's fine--but please, read one of the novels I list above. Otherwise I simply can't have a meaningful discussion with you in this regard. To base an opinion on something as comparatively insignificant as The Taming of the Shrew simply isn't fair. Also, Washington Square (which I believe was on your list of 2008 reads) is what I would call B-rate James, at best (i.e., good enough, but nothing exceptional).

    I don't mean to be harsh or take umbrage unnecessarily, but I do feel that comparisons should be fair above all else. Since you mention Yates, I assume you've read one of his MAJOR novels. To not give James that same benefit seems very unjust.

    As for Dickens, unless you have a very twisted sense of humor, I just cannot imagine your finding Bleak House or A Tale of Two Cities funny. And yes, I do consider a novel in which one man sacrifices his life to save another (as in A Tale of Two Cities) thought-provoking.

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette Jones
    And don't get me started on Wuthering Heights. (luckily you didn't mention Emily Bronte).
    I only named a few people because I was merely trying to find examples. When I first read Wuthering Heights, I found it confusing. Later, I understood what Emily Bronte was trying to say. The narrative structure can be frustrating, and the novel is not pleasant to read. But I do think Emily conveys something about human nature that is interesting--and that is how closely aligned hate and love can be, and how easily pride can destroy us.

    Stewart has recommended Yates to me, and I'm sure Revolutionary Road is a great book. But I don't think I'll be putting Yates in the same category with the classic novelists I mentioned any time soon. Just out of curiosity--in what way has one of Yates' novels changed your life, Colette? I haven't read any of his books....so maybe I really am missing out on something. I know that many books that are technically "classics" have changed my life, including Tolstoy's Resurrection and Dostoevsky's The Possessed and The Brothers Karamazov, Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth, James' The Wings of the Dove, as well as Mann's Doctor Faustus.

    I'm perfectly prepared to accept that we simply have different vantage points in regard to books. But the Richard Yates argument puzzles me. If, for example, you had said that Salman Rushdie or Saramago was as thought-provoking as Dickens and Balzac, I'd have been more easily persuaded. But Yates? From the descriptions of his novels, I see nothing psychologically penetrating about them. He's compared to J. D. Salinger and John Cheever, both of whom, I must say, are hardly known for their depth of characterization or their treatment of thought-provoking issues. Rather, it seems Yates is a different sort of writer entirely. And maybe that's just the point--he appeals to you whereas these other authors don't. He is hailed as a "chronicler of 20th century mainstream American life," as opposed to James whose finest novels have been called "brilliantly
    subtle and penetrating character studies."

    The fact you appreciate Yates is not something I have trouble with as I believe that each person is entitled to have his or her own favorites where authors and books are concerned. However, when you start calling Dickens and James "a lot of fun," I must protest as that's not an accurate assessment of their writing.


    All the best for 2009,
    Titania
    Last edited by titania7; 03-Jan-2009 at 10:40.
    "All men have the same defect: they wait to live, for they have not the courage of each instant.
    Why not invest enough passion in each moment to make it an eternity?" ~E. M. Cioran

  3. #3

    Default Re: Umberto Eco: Foucault's Pendulum

    Whoa, Titania, I was not trying to start a fight! I am certainly not well-read in the classics but I was just trying to say that, compared to those classics I have tried, I prefer more recent writing. I have not read Bleak House and I agree it does not sound funny. I was referring to Great Expectations as a bit of fun, but was not intending to make commentary on all Dickens' books!

    My post was meant to be fun - in that you prefer classics to more recent authors and I am the opposite. I thought we might find books to offer each other to show what we like and why. I am only giving my opinion - I don't really mind what other people prefer and would not try to convince anyone that what I prefer is better.

    A Side Note: "A bit of fun" does not mean funny to me. I didn't find Great Expectations funny.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Atlanta, Georgia
    Posts
    1,059

    Italy Re: Umberto Eco: Foucault's Pendulum

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette Jones
    Whoa, Titania, I was not trying to start a fight!
    Colette,
    Forgive me if I overreacted. Strangely enough, I've been called upon to defend my views about various things quite a bit lately. Thus, I may be a wee bit sensitive in this regard. I appreciate the fact that you don't want to start any sort of quarrel--neither do I.

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette Jones
    I am certainly not well-read in the classics
    ....just as I am not very well-read when it comes to contemporary fiction. I've told Stewart about my lack of familiarity with "modern" authors on more than one occasion. If you take a look at my 50 Favorite Books, you'll see that most of the books on my list are what would be called "classics."
    Henry James, Charles Dickens, George Eliot, Honore De Balzac, Victor Hugo, Guy De Maupassant, Thomas Mann, Gustave Flaubert, Marie-Henri Beyle Stendhal, Emile Zola, Diderot--all of these authors are close to my heart. To have never read their books would have deprived me of great joy and happiness. These are the writers I grew up reading, and I'm passionate about them.

    If my passion comes across as vehemence, I apologize. I simply feel that
    a person must read the best books by these writers before they can form any viable opinions about them. Quite honestly, I cannot give you an accurate judgment when it comes to Richard Yates. And this isn't my fault. I've been on a waiting list for Revolutionary Road (from the library) for over two months. I hope I'll enjoy him as much as you did, Colette. I am quite impressed by Andrei Makine, for example, and he's a recent writer.

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette Jones
    but I was just trying to say that, compared to those classics I have tried, I prefer more recent writing.
    In all likelihood, you and I are somewhat similar. I've concluded that I prefer classic literature because that's what I've read the most of, and you've concluded that you prefer contemporary fiction because that's what you're most familiar with. We both need to broaden our horizons, don't we? Do take a look at some of the "classics" on my 50 Favorites, by the way. I suspect you'll find a few there that will (possibly) change your opinion about "classic" literature.

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette Jones
    I have not read Bleak House and I agree it does not sound funny.
    It's an incredibly tragic book. Indeed, it would be impossible not to be affected by it for weeks after finishing it. It's also interesting to note
    that there's a very harrowing aspect of Dickens' novel, Nicholas Nickelby. In this novel, Dickens depicts the tortuous lives of boys who are sent off to boarding school. Of course you think it must be exaggerated when you read it. However, one of my friends who lives in England tells me that she's actually visited graveyards where there are lines of tombstones commemorating the lives of all the young boys who died in boarding schools like the ones depicted in Nicholas Nickelby.

    On a James-related note, the character of Milly Theale in The Wings of the Dove was based on a young heiress that James met. In the book, she is dying of cancer (the disease is only hinted at). I don't know whether or not the psychopathic Kate Croy, who pursues Milly for her inheritance,
    was inspired by an actual person or not. In all probability, she was. But as you can see, the plot of this book, which I'm only hinting at, is psychologically brutal. You might have trouble believing that this is the same James who wrote The Turn of the Screw. But the James who wrote
    The Wings of the Dove is the one I speak of when I talk about his "deep understanding of human nature." I cannot even think of a writer who has painted a more subtle, more believable portrait of a psychopath than James did with Kate Croy. The amazing thing is (and this could only happen with James), the reader can't help but empathize with her.
    Intricate fiction indeed.

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette Jones
    I was referring to Great Expectations as a bit of fun, but was not intending to make commentary on all Dickens' books!
    Fair enough .

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette Jones
    My post was meant to be fun - in that you prefer classics to more recent authors and I am the opposite. I thought we might find books to offer each other to show what we like and why. I am only giving my opinion - I don't really mind what other people prefer and would not try to convince anyone that what I prefer is better.
    Colette, I'm fully cognizant of the fact that I took your post too seriously.
    I'm like a tigress defending her cub when it comes to my favorite authors and books! But I would certainly love the idea of us finding books to recommend to each other. That would be absolutely delightful! I, too, believe that there's room for everyone's taste where literature is concerned. No two people are alike. And there's no "right" or "wrong" type of literature to read or to enjoy. I recently had an interesting debate with a friend about "good" and "bad" literature, and we decided that both
    terms are pre-defined...and should probably be banished! The only thing is, we couldn't think up any terms to replace "good" and "bad." Thus, we're stuck with them--at least for the moment .

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette Jones
    A Side Note: "A bit of fun" does not mean funny to me. I didn't find Great Expectations funny.
    I didn't, either. It's actually a very sad book, even though there's a lot of humor in it. Dickens is quite good at combining pathos and wit. Even in Bleak House, there are at least a few moments that are....well, not utterly bleak!

    Colette, thanks for your considerate response to my overly zealous post.
    I'm a passionate and feisty lass, and I sometimes let my fervor get the best of me .

    Warmest regards,
    Titania
    "All men have the same defect: they wait to live, for they have not the courage of each instant.
    Why not invest enough passion in each moment to make it an eternity?" ~E. M. Cioran

  5. #5

    Default Re: Umberto Eco: Foucault's Pendulum

    Quote Originally Posted by titania7 View Post
    Colette,
    Forgive me if I overreacted. Strangely enough, I've been called upon to defend my views about various things quite a bit lately. Thus, I may be a wee bit sensitive in this regard. I appreciate the fact that you don't want to start any sort of quarrel--neither do I.
    I've had to steadfastly defend my views on something very important over the last year, so I sympathise! It is now over, thank goodness. (Famous last words).
    Quote Originally Posted by titania7 View Post
    I simply feel that
    a person must read the best books by these writers before they can form any viable opinions about them. Quite honestly, I cannot give you an accurate judgment when it comes to Richard Yates. And this isn't my fault. I've been on a waiting list for Revolutionary Road (from the library) for over two months. I hope I'll enjoy him as much as you did, Colette. I am quite impressed by Andrei Makine, for example, and he's a recent writer.
    I've only read two of Yates' books (Revolutionary Road and The Easter Parade). The difference between him and Dickens where I am concerned (and I speak for me alone) is I am left wanting to read Yates' entire catalog whereas I'm not sure I'll pick up another Dickens.
    Quote Originally Posted by titania7 View Post
    On a James-related note, the character of Milly Theale in The Wings of the Dove was based on a young heiress that James met. In the book, she is dying of cancer (the disease is only hinted at). I don't know whether or not the psychopathic Kate Croy, who pursues Milly for her inheritance,
    was inspired by an actual person or not. In all probability, she was. But as you can see, the plot of this book, which I'm only hinting at, is psychologically brutal. You might have trouble believing that this is the same James who wrote The Turn of the Screw. But the James who wrote
    The Wings of the Dove is the one I speak of when I talk about his "deep understanding of human nature." I cannot even think of a writer who has painted a more subtle, more believable portrait of a psychopath than James did with Kate Croy. The amazing thing is (and this could only happen with James), the reader can't help but empathize with her.
    Intricate fiction indeed.
    You've sold me on this one - it sounds fantastic. I am intrigued by Henry James, not just his fiction, but his life, and that of his brother William.

    Although I am not tempted to read another Dickens, I'm quite tempted with James as you can see, and others we corresponded about such as Zola and Thomas Mann. I like books which leave me wanting to read another of the author's books and that just didn't happen with Great Expectations.

    I wonder if Stewart would like to move these posts to a new thread - "Personal taste - Classics v Contemporary" or something like that (although I don't want it to sound like a contest - both are good).

  6. #6

    Default Re: Umberto Eco: Foucault's Pendulum

    I wonder if Stewart would like to move these posts to a new thread - "Personal taste - Classics v Contemporary" or something like that (although I don't want it to sound like a contest - both are good).
    Consider it done, since it is.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Atlanta, Georgia
    Posts
    1,059

    Default Classic vs Contemporary

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette Jones
    I've had to steadfastly defend my views on something very important over the last year, so I sympathise! It is now over, thank goodness. (Famous last words).
    The important thing, of course, it so remain steadfast . Sounds like you did it, Colette!

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette
    I've only read two of Yates' books (Revolutionary Road and The Easter Parade). The difference between him and Dickens where I am concerned (and I speak for me alone) is I am left wanting to read Yates' entire catalog whereas I'm not sure I'll pick up another Dickens.
    There's nothing quite like that feeling you have when you know you want to read everything a writer has written. I know what this is like--I've felt it too many times to count! Dostoevsky, Balzac, Marai, Thomas Hardy, D. H. Lawrence, Henry James....those are just a few authors whose entire oeuvres of work I want to read.

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette
    You've sold me on this one (The Wings of the Dove)- it sounds fantastic. I am intrigued by Henry James, not just his fiction, but his life, and that of his brother William.
    Yes, I love William James, too! In fact, I highly recommend his writing. When I was in theatre I read him nearly every night. It was a way to keep my sanity . As for Henry, many of his shorter works are excellent, but his novels are where he shows his genius. Of his short stories, I do recommend the one called "The Beast in the Jungle." It's been known to change a few peoples' lives. Although I won't discourage you from reading ANY of his books, The Wings of the Dove and The Portrait of a Lady are great places to begin.

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette Jones
    Although I am not tempted to read another Dickens, I'm quite tempted with James as you can see, and others we corresponded about such as Zola and Thomas Mann.
    Oh, there are so many "classic" authors whom I suspect you would enjoy! Knowing a bit about your taste, I would heartily recommend Flaubert, Maupassant, Stendhal, and Zola....and possibly even Dumas and Victor Hugo. Even if you don't like Dickens, I still think you would enjoy Thomas Hardy. He's a bit of an obsession for me. And D. H. Lawrence--wow, have you ever read him, Colette? I remember when I first read Women in Love--there were actually moments when I couldn't believe I was reading a writer who could write that beautifully and that powerfully.

    The Russian authors are another area to explore. Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, and Turgenev cannot be overlooked. I've long been aware of the fact that I need to learn about more contemporary Russian authors, too. So, maybe we can learn about those together, Colette! Eric has told me about Rybakov, and I'm already devoted to Solzhenitsyn. I know there must be many others. I have enjoyed the short stories of Tatyana Tolstoya.

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette Jones
    I like books which leave me wanting to read another of the author's books and that just didn't happen with Great Expectations.
    It's all about personal preferences, Colette. Dickens simply isn't your "cup of tea," obviously. The important thing is that you haven't "written off" classic literature because of him. And that's what I'm delighted about!

    Quote Originally Posted by Colette Jones
    I wonder if Stewart would like to move these posts to a new thread - "Personal taste - Classics v Contemporary" or something like that (although I don't want it to sound like a contest - both are good).
    I must extend my thanks to Stewart in this regard. You certainly are on top of things!

    ~Titania
    "All men have the same defect: they wait to live, for they have not the courage of each instant.
    Why not invest enough passion in each moment to make it an eternity?" ~E. M. Cioran

  8. Default Re: Classic vs Contemporary

    The upshot of this is that classics are more illustrious than contemporaries,as contemporaries are overlooking classics,or thereabouts,which dispel the productivity of antecedent stories.Lo and behold,no one in this contemporary era can outclass Henry James' intellect,which is inexplicable.This is my deep-rooted conviction.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Sweden
    Posts
    7,655

    Default Re: Classic vs Contemporary

    Lionel, #30, if you're having a serious debate about classic versus contemporary, you shouldn't "lighten up". If you want light banter, try the Chat section.

    You should preferably analyse, as I did in my postings, and as indeed Italo Calvino seems to have done in what Stewart posted. But I have to say that Calvino does get a bit soundbitey. He rather likes the sound of his own voice in witty paradox after witty paradox. Such as the one Colette Jones points out: "Every reading of a classic is in fact a rereading". Oh, glibbitude!

    Let's avoid the word "fucking". It implies that the mind behind the term used is desperately short of adjectives. Just because the word is used in some famous novel, doesn't mean you have to use it liberally just to give you a thrill.

    I'm sorry to say that I think this debate is moving in the direction of Humpty Dumpty definitions. No one seems really to be able to define classics. And as I have said earlier, the definition is often driven by publishing houses in specific countries rather than by such noble ideas as canon and value. Classics also vary from country to country. Even between Britain and the USA, both speaking the same language, there is a certain difference of focus. And if you examine the French or German canon of classics (ignoring the obvious local-language literature listed there) you will find differences of focus.

    All these factors have to be thought about seriously. There's more to defining what is a classic than first meets the eye.

  10. Default Re: Classic vs Contemporary

    Quote Originally Posted by Eric View Post
    Lionel, #30, if you're having a serious debate about classic versus contemporary, you shouldn't "lighten up".
    As usual, you've completely misunderstood what I was saying ? it's impossible to have a serious debate about opposition between the two because anything said will be impossibly subjective. Understand this time?

    Quote Originally Posted by Eric View Post
    Let's avoid the word "fucking".
    Why? It's an ordinary word. It's not a word of hate like some, which, mercifully, I don't think we'll find here. I was making a point about self-censorship, which you again chose to ignore.

    Quote Originally Posted by Eric View Post
    It implies that the mind behind the term used is desperately short of adjectives.
    Don't be ridiculous.

    Quote Originally Posted by Eric View Post
    Just because the word is used in some famous novel, doesn't mean you have to use it liberally just to give you a thrill.

  11. #11

    Default Re: Classic vs Contemporary

    Lionel do not feed the troll please or we never see the end of him.

  12. Default Re: Classic vs Contemporary

    Quote Originally Posted by saliotthomas View Post
    Lionel do not feed the troll please or we never see the end of him.
    Sorry, Thomas

Similar Threads

  1. D. H. Lawrence: Studies in Classic American Literature
    By liehtzu in forum European Literature
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 17-Jul-2011, 06:45
  2. Contemporary British fiction
    By Eric in forum General Discussion
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: 21-Feb-2010, 11:32
  3. Should certain classic authors be banned?
    By Eric in forum General Chat
    Replies: 17
    Last Post: 28-Sep-2009, 11:07
  4. Baroque and classic Literature.
    By saliotthomas in forum General Discussion
    Replies: 12
    Last Post: 15-Aug-2009, 12:39
  5. Now in English: Anoeschka von Meck's Classic Vaselinetjie
    By BlogSpy in forum The Blogosphere
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 14-Jul-2009, 16:10

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •