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- Path: sparky!uunet!ogicse!decwrl!concert!sas!mozart.unx.sas.com!sasafw
- From: sasafw@dobo.unx.sas.com (Fred Welden)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: Theme?
- Message-ID: <Bx9B00.MsA@unx.sas.com>
- Date: 5 Nov 92 18:50:23 GMT
- Article-I.D.: unx.Bx9B00.MsA
- References: <92310.095916KVJLC@ASUACAD.BITNET>
- Sender: news@unx.sas.com (Noter of Newsworthy Events)
- Organization: Dobonia
- Lines: 50
- Originator: sasafw@dobo.unx.sas.com
- Nntp-Posting-Host: dobo.unx.sas.com
-
-
- In article <92310.095916KVJLC@ASUACAD.BITNET>, Jon L. Campbell <KVJLC@ASUACAD.BITNET> writes:
- |A story of love is only
- |a series of sporadic events in which multiple random events are brought
- |together by chance. Dick meets Jane at the park, they fall in love and
- |through a series of events marry each other. Their chance encounter
- |in the park is not a moral passage in time, but characteristic of the
- |chaos that occasionally brings unlike events together.
-
- There's a theme.
-
- |I can't imagine why anyone would try to
- |influence the reader with their idea of what is moral and what isn't.
- |
- |What do you think?
-
- I'm not convinced that "theme" and "moral" are the same thing, nor that
- "moral" in the sense of the moral of a story has very much to do with
- the tenets of a moral viewpoint, but grant for the moment that Garner
- means them to be closely related:
-
- If you're not going to try to influence the reader, why concern yourself
- with the reader in any way? Just keep a journal of all these random,
- chaotic events around you for your own perusal. As soon as you ask
- someone to read what you've written, you are trying to influence them.
-
- If you're trying to influence them, why should you avoid trying to
- influence their moral judgment? If there is no such thing as morality,
- as you suggest, then this will have no more significant impact than
- trying to influence their esthetic judgment by making them realize that
- the story in hand is well-worded. If there is such a thing as morality,
- is there a more benign way to attempt to educate people in yours than by
- writing stories about it?
-
- You might note, by the way, that "Crime pays" is every bit as much a
- moral, and a tenet of a moral viewpoint, as "Crime doesn't pay." Sounds
- to me like the moral of your stories would be something like "Shit
- happens." Perhaps not a terribly interesting moral, but a moral
- nonetheless.
-
- | Does anyone out there still use a theme in their stories?
-
- Yep. Myself, and just about every writer I've read.
-
- Now I'm curious. Why exactly do you want to write fiction anyway?
-
-
- --
- --Fred, or another blind 8th-century BC | sasafw@dobo.unx.sas.com
- Hellenic poet of the same name. |
-