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3 votes
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What's your attitude about Russian classic literature?
Warning: this post may contain spoilers
Have you ever read it? And what do your friends think about it?
I'm really interested in foreign (I'm from Ukraine) opinions on this subject.
Sorry for my bad English, thanks.
27 votes -
The most profound cosmic horror or weird lit stories you've read that are not Lovecraft or Ligotti
There are two relevant passages that signal what I mean when I used the word profound. The first is about Lovecraft. The universe of modern science engendered a profounder horror in Lovecraft’s...
There are two relevant passages that signal what I mean when I used the word profound. The first is about Lovecraft.
The universe of modern science engendered a profounder horror in Lovecraft’s writings than that stemming from its tremendous distances and its highly probably alien and powerful non-human inhabitants. For the chief reason that man fears the universe revealed by materialistic science is that it is a purposeless, soulless place. To quote Lovecraft’s “The Silver Key”, man can hardly bear the realization that “the blind cosmos grinds aimlessly on from nothing to something and from something back to nothing again, neither heeding nor knowing the wishes or existence of the minds that flicker for a second now and then in the darkness.”
Fritz Leiber, “A Literary Copernicus”, 1949
The second is by weird lit author Thomas Ligotti. I think it describes a certain kind of sensation I get from his stories.
In the literature of supernatural horror, a familiar storyline is that of a character who encounters a paradox in the flesh, so to speak, and must face down or collapse in horror before this ontological perversion —something which should not be, and yet is. Most fabled as specimens of a living paradox are the "undead," those walking cadavers greedy for an eternal presence on earth. But whether their existence should go on unendingly or be cut short by a stake in the heart is not germane to the matter at hand. What is exceedingly material resides in the supernatural horror that such beings could exist in their impossible way for an instant. Other examples of paradox and supernatural horror congealing together are inanimate things guilty of infractions against their nature. Perhaps the most outstanding instance of this phenomenon is a puppet that breaks free of its strings and becomes self-mobilized.
[…]
Whether or not there really are manifestations of the supernatural, they are horrifying to us in concept, since we think ourselves to be living in a natural world, which may be a festival of massacres but only in a physical rather than a metaphysical purport. This is why we routinely equate the supernatural with horror. And a puppet possessed of life would exemplify just such a horror, because it would negate all conceptions of a natural physicalism and affirm a metaphysics of chaos and nightmare. It would still be a puppet, but it would be a puppet with a mind and a will, a human puppet—a paradox more disruptive of sanity than the undead. But that is not how they would see it. Human puppets could not conceive of themselves as being puppets at all, not when they are fixed with a consciousness that excites in them the unshakable sense of being singled out from all other objects in creation. Once you begin to feel you are making a go of it on your own—that you are making moves and thinking thoughts which seem to have originated within you—it is not possible for you to believe you are anything but your own master.
Thomas Ligotti, “The Conspiracy Against the Human Race”, 2010
I think these passages illustrate the rich philosophical subtext that is found in the said authors' work. I'm looking for other cosmic horror or weird lit stories that evoke a sense of profoundness or philosophical deepness.
43 votes -
How the internet revived the world's first work of interactive fiction
13 votes -
Jack Conroy, proletarian author and editor, supported important 20th century US poets
4 votes -
'James' and 'Demon Copperhead': the triumph of literary reimagining of classic books
8 votes -
From Red Riding Hood to Beowulf: On the essential role of literary reimaginings
10 votes -
How I taught the Iliad to Chinese teenagers
19 votes -
Each year from 2014 to 2114, a manuscript is sealed in The Silent Room of Norway's Future Library – the goal: greater hope for humankind
13 votes -
My doomed career as a North Korean novelist
24 votes -
The Norway model: How the Scandinavian country became a literary powerhouse
8 votes -
Subversive, queer and terrifyingly relevant: six reasons why Moby-Dick is the novel for our times (2019)
23 votes -
Three medieval tales about adventures to the Moon - from three different cultures
12 votes -
Death in literature: Can you really prepare for it or even understand it? Ten suggested books from Ted Gioia
13 votes -
Literature Map: The more people like an author and another author, the closer together they move
17 votes -
Josh Cook on the uses and misuses of judgement about literary quality and reflections about the process of suggesting books
5 votes -
BBC list eighteen of the best new books for 2023
17 votes -
What belongs in your "base" hard-copy library?
I finally have the space to finish a project I've been working on which is a study with 3 bookcases. So far, my idea is to have 1 with books that will always be there, such as classic reads, or...
I finally have the space to finish a project I've been working on which is a study with 3 bookcases. So far, my idea is to have 1 with books that will always be there, such as classic reads, or even an encyclopedia maybe?, or other reference material. Basically, a permanent bookcase whether or not I've read the material. The other two will be rotated in and out of stuff that I'm reading, have read recently or on my backlog before swapping or donating.
Anyways, what's in your "must have" bookcase? Reference, fiction/non-fiction, Calvin & Hobbes even! (Although that's more of a coffee table piece)
18 votes -
Michael Silverblatt interviews W. G. Sebald
5 votes -
‘The Norse Myths That Shape the Way We Think’ by Carolyne Larrington – from Tolkien to Marvel, the huge influence of Norse myths on modern culture
2 votes -
Join the Counterforce: Thomas Pynchon’s postmodern epic Gravity’s Rainbow at fifty
6 votes -
The first ordinary woman in English literature. The life and legacy of the Wife of Bath.
5 votes -
What kind of Angel: On Percy Shelley
4 votes -
Interlinear Books: Learn between the lines (Subtitled books)
11 votes -
The Billionaire’s Bard: On the rationalist fictions of Neal Stephenson
9 votes -
Why is young adult fiction the defining literary genre of the last two decades? What does its popularity say about modern American life?
20 votes -
Nawal El Saadawi, Egyptian author and women’s rights icon, dies
7 votes -
Fifty very bad book covers for literary classics
26 votes -
Louise Glück wins Nobel Prize for Literature
6 votes -
If you had to teach a class on literature, what books would you put on your syllabus?
I asked a similar question over in ~games and am interested to hear how ~books would respond to the same setup. Here's the task: pretend you're a professor! You have to do the following: Choose a...
I asked a similar question over in ~games and am interested to hear how ~books would respond to the same setup.
Here's the task: pretend you're a professor! You have to do the following:
- Choose a focus for your class on literature (with a snazzy title if you like)
- Choose the books that you, as a professor, will have your class dive into in order to convey key concepts
- Explain why each book you chose ties into your overarching exploration
Your class can have any focus, broad or specific: victorian literature, contemporary poetry, Shakespearean themes in non-Shakespearean works -- whatever you want! It can focus on any forms of literature and does not have to be explicitly limited to "books" if you want to look at some outside-of-the-box stuff (I once took a literature class where we read afternoon, a story, for example.)
After choosing your specific focus, choose what will be included on your syllabus as "required reading" and why you've chosen each item.
16 votes -
Looking for genre classics
While the latest hype-trains and the guaranteed oldies give me a reading list a few thousand books long, I like to read things which are left by the wayside. This list here is a good example. The...
While the latest hype-trains and the guaranteed oldies give me a reading list a few thousand books long, I like to read things which are left by the wayside. This list here is a good example. The author gives a list of genre classics. Books which aren't good enough to make the top 1000 books of all time, but are classics in their own genre and influenced a lot of future authors. The Princess and the Goblin is a good example. Everyone interested in Tolkien and the Inklings has read it, as well as those who like modern fairy tales, but it doesn't crop up much in recommendations lists. These are books which aren't quite as commonly discussed, but still good and important for people interested in the genre.
So, if you have a favorite genre or sub-genre I would love to read your 'genre classics' list, with maybe a sentence about why I should enjoy it. Not quite as comprehensive as a class on books, more than a bullet point.
Edit:
I just realized I didn't change the title. By the 'gap', I originally meant the gap between the books everyone suggests from the past and the mountain of dredged pulp you find in libraries and bookstores: books which are worth still reading, even if they aren't one of the 'Classics'. More like underrated recommendations.5 votes -
A small collection of novels — some great, some not so great — appeared in just the right form at just the right moment to effect lasting changes
5 votes -
Eight surprising literary Easter eggs
2 votes -
Dark Deleuze
4 votes -
Algonquin Round Table: How the group of writers became a symbol of the roaring twenties
4 votes -
Nick Carraway is gay and in love with Gatsby
23 votes -
International alternatives...
I've recently realised I read a lot of American literature. I'd like to broaden my horizons so I'm wondering for fun if anyone out there can suggest an international (i.e non-US) counterpart for...
I've recently realised I read a lot of American literature. I'd like to broaden my horizons so I'm wondering for fun if anyone out there can suggest an international (i.e non-US) counterpart for any of the following or just general non-US recommendations?
- Denis Johnson
- David Foster Wallace
- Flannery O'Conner
- Carson McCullers
8 votes -
James Joyce’s grandson and the death of the stubborn literary executor
7 votes -
Asimov at 100: From epic space operas to rules for robots, the prolific author’s literary legacy endures
9 votes -
Is France still at the center of the French-language literary world? Or, to ask a broader question, is there a center at all?
6 votes -
Olga Tokarczuk – Nobel Lecture
4 votes -
Protests grow as Peter Handke receives Nobel medal in Sweden – Turkey joined Albania and Kosovo in boycotting Tuesday's Nobel prize ceremony
5 votes -
Nobel prize for literature hit by fresh round of resignations – two members of the external committee set up to oversee reforms quit on Monday
6 votes -
How to live like Jane Austen
4 votes -
“This has to end. We cannot say it any clearer.” A guide to the decades-long familial dispute over John Steinbeck’s estate.
7 votes -
Literary Paper Dolls: Rebecca
4 votes -
'My nerves are going fast': The Grapes of Wrath’s hard road to publication
3 votes -
Despite being a best-selling author, Jane Austen was paid very little
6 votes -
Eight crime writers who wrote other forms of literature, including literary novels, memoirs, and even works of history
7 votes -
Future Library is one of the most interesting projects happening in Europe right now that connects literature, art and the environment
4 votes