faustus: (auton)
([personal profile] faustus Mar. 22nd, 2009 06:42 pm)
I am a bad researcher. I ought to sit down with texts and work my way through them, taking copious notes, and then assemble these elements into a coherent argument. Most of the time, however, I start with an idea and find the evidence to fit it. There's a cultural connection between food, music and sex which will explain The Sparrow. The medusa chimes with Joanna Russ. This has scary ramifications for my practice - the three papers I delivered in February were all written at the last minute.

The metaphor I reach for is Michelangelo - although I am hardly he. In each block of stone he found his statues, by chipping away the stone that didn't fit.



I'm working on a book on 1970s sf - witness http://flares.wordpress.com - and for two years now I've had a plan. I knew what happened during the period, and how sf changed during the period - and ... well I've wanted to avoid a masternarrative that simplified the period as having one thing at stake. Yet, there was still something missing. Perhaps the big so-what?

Yesterday, in the Carbuncle Cafe I sat and read the start of Stephen Paul Miller’s The Seventies Now: Culture as Surveillance - a book I lent my copy of six years ago - and something fell into place. Imagine a thousand tumbling dominoes, in the shape of a bud coming into bloom. That explains why those films have amphicatastrophic endings - and indeed why Star Wars is eucatastrophic. That explains part of what's going on in feminism, and why there are so few gays in 1970s sf. Everything makes sense in a way it hadn't yesterday afternoon. I'd also for a while had the sense that the Doctor Who story "The Invisible Enemy" was key (as well as Flow My Tears the Policeman Said) - and now I know why.

My statue has a face.

From: [identity profile] buffysquirrel.livejournal.com


Hmm, well, I've always thought the seventies (which I remember, a bit) often get a raw deal. The music was more mature than that from the '60s, and less commercial than what came after. Certainly the '70s were nothing like so soul-destroyingly awful as the '80s.

Thanks for the definitions :).

From: [identity profile] buffysquirrel.livejournal.com


(oh, and amphicatastrophe seems to me, at first glance, to describe the ending of my story "Sundown", so obviously I really am a seventies child! lol)
.

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