Ha, I wasn't trying to argue either. I did sort of feel like you were glazing over the significance of sub-genres, but that was my misunderstanding. Anyway, your observations are definitely correct (and have gotten me thinking about this again, and in new ways). I knew you were talking about Romance, by the way; the mention of Romanticism was my own tangential side-note, because I see a particular connection there. My ideas about this are more developed than I've explained here, but going off on some invented genre in an unrelated thread seemed silly, so some confusion inevitably arose.Mr_sausage wrote:I wasn't trying to argue anything with you, it's just that the process sounds a lot like certain other generic process and I figured I'd point it out. I have no interest in disagreeing with you. But you're being unfair in your understanding of what I said. You accuse me of casting my net too wide, but the genre of Romance is itself a very wide catagory; and I was specifying what elements, narrative and structural, I thought followed the pattern set up by Romance (and I'm not talking about Romanticism, which is a specific 19th century derivation of the much older literary genre of Romance). I think you've mistaken me for saying that the genre of fantasy (Dungeons and Dragons stuff) and the genre of Sci-Fi are the same thing because I'm lax in my definitions. What I actually think is that both the fantasy genre and the Sci-Fi genre are likely subsections of a much larger genre called Romance, a genre that includes the Arthurian legends, the tales of Apollonius, Spenser's Faery Queen, the aforementioned Lord of the Rings, ect. That's not to say Science-Fiction is not a unique development; rather, that it likely shares more with non-scientific fantasy narrative than is often assumed. But I don't want to press the point since this is speculation and you no doubt know far more about Science Fiction that I do. It was just an observation on my part.
And I am not expert on science fiction (although I heartily recommend reading "With Folded Hands", which might be my favorite sci-fi story period, and "Time Wants a Skeleton", which is just good fun).
Schreck, I've read some Dick but not nearly enough. Ellison I'll look into -- danke.