-
9 votes
-
Premier Daniel Andrews has just announced that the Victorian government will ban gay conversion therapy in that state
9 votes -
New York passes Gender Expression Non-Discrimination Act (GENDA) and legislation banning “conversion therapy”
12 votes -
The future of the minimum wage is alive in Seattle
7 votes -
What social responsibilities do fiction authors have (if any)?
In 1977, Stephen King published a novel about a school shooting called Rage. It is somewhat infamous, as it has been connected to instances of real-life school shootings. King, in response,...
In 1977, Stephen King published a novel about a school shooting called Rage. It is somewhat infamous, as it has been connected to instances of real-life school shootings. King, in response, allowed the story to fall out of print and has never reissued it. The novel has a lot in common with other YA stories and tropes: a disaffected protagonist, meddling/out of touch adults, and newfound social connection with peers. While the main character is undoubtedly disturbed, the novel feels somewhat uncritical (or potentially even supportive) of his actions.
Certainly fiction is a space where authors are free to explore any point of view or theme they wish. The beauty of fiction is that it is limitless and consequence-free. No people are harmed in Rage because there are no people in it. Its characters are merely names and ideas--they are a fiction.
Nevertheless, Rage addresses a real-world phenomenon, and the beauty of fiction is that it doesn't live as a lie. As Ursula K. Le Guin writes,
"In reading a novel, any novel, we have to know perfectly well that the whole thing is nonsense, and then, while reading, believe every word of it. Finally, when we're done with it, we may find - if it's a good novel - that we're a bit different from what we were before we read it, that we have changed a little..."
We like fiction because it resonates with us, exposing us to themes that can affirm, shape, or challenge our mindsets.
With this dichotomy in mind, I'm torn between whether authors should be free to explore anything they wish from the safety of make-believe, or whether they have a social responsibility because their words carry messages and ideas that directly impact lives. I'm not sure what to think, and I can come up with great arguments for both sides. What's your take? What social responsibilities do fiction authors have (if any)?
19 votes -
Board Games and Social Isolation
9 votes -
The spread of low-credibility content by social bots
8 votes -
Indigenous Canadian women kept from seeing their newborn babies until agreeing to sterilization, says lawyer
22 votes -
Polls close in high-stakes Madagascar presidential election
7 votes -
One Night, Hot Springs uses social anxiety to explain what it’s like to be transgender in Japan.
10 votes -
China's demographic problem. The one child policy effect.
4 votes -
China's Social Credit system: The first modern digital dictatorship
8 votes -
Natasha Aponte, woman who tricked thousands of men on Tinder, explains purpose behind dating competition
12 votes -
Swiss town set for universal basic income experiment
13 votes -
Tact filters
9 votes -
DOOM: The fake outrage
25 votes -
A study on the online "filter bubble" found that liberals and conservatives were actually recommended similar stories on Google News, representing a fairly homogeneous set of mainstream news sources
8 votes -
California Senate passes bill to ban gay conversion therapy
23 votes -
China's rebel generation and the rise of 'hot words'
8 votes -
Thinking allowed
3 votes -
'A huge win': New Zealand brings in paid domestic violence leave in world first
7 votes -
A 'frontpage' of Mastodon toots (someone's weekend project)
4 votes -
What the reality of breastfeeding looks like in the US
12 votes -
Any interest in the social sciences and humanities here?
Most spaces flying the flag of science are often unfortunately exclusive in their focus on STEM sciences. In order to combat such a monopoly and until such time as Tildes opens up groups for the...
Most spaces flying the flag of science are often unfortunately exclusive in their focus on STEM sciences. In order to combat such a monopoly and until such time as Tildes opens up groups for the social sciences and humanities, I'd like to open this place up to discussion around some of the disciplines which have always personally interested me more than, say, astronomy or biology. Is anyone else here interested in sociology, archaeology, anthropology, linguistics..? Has anyone pursued work in those fields? Any interesting perspectives to offer or news of recent breakthroughs in any of those areas? All discussion is welcome.
As for myself, I'm particularly interested in sociocultural anthropology and archaeology--in the latter case, specifically as relates to the Neolithic and Bronze Age Near East. I'll soon be pursuing a degree in anthropology with an archaeological orientation at the University of Buenos Aires and hope to be working in the field soon after the end of my studies. I'm also incidentally interested in sociology, philosophy, and literature studies, but don't have any plans at the moment to pursue academic study thereof. Any questions? Feel free to ask.
17 votes -
Podcast recommendations
I was wondering if anyone had any good humor or social commentary podcast recommendations. I've come to a blank when trying to find new ones. Any and all suggestions welcome!
21 votes -
Tunisian presidential committee recommends decriminalizing homosexuality
5 votes -
Research finds tipping point for large-scale social change
10 votes -
Denmark bans the burqa and niqab
15 votes -
Uganda imposes WhatsApp and Facebook tax 'to stop gossip'
5 votes -
Mozilla to remove “meritocracy” from governance docs because it's “problematic”
12 votes -
Why are we living in an age of anger – is it because of the fifty-year rage cycle?
8 votes -
Canada to add third gender option in government surveys
6 votes -
Ontario’s new scalping law may not protect consumers, critics warn
4 votes