Lone Wolf
Deity
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2006
- Messages
- 9,908
An art thread from me, for a change.
What degree of control an author has over the "canon" of his work? There are two opposing concepts on that issue, roughly described here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_the_Author
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/WordOfGod
Which of those you subscribe to?
Personally, I lean towards "the death of the author" concept. Once an author publishes the text, it ceases to belong only to him and starts to live independently of the author. I'd even say that if the author wants for us to know some trivia about a character, he should have published it in his work.
Which ones of these statements made (post-publlication, word-of-god style) by the author are to be accepted unquestionably in regards to literary analysis, and which can be challenged? (No one of these statements appeared in the text of the original work):
-Character X has blue eyes.
-Character X is very smart.
-Character X is morally justified in his actions.
-Villainous character Y actually redeemed himself while the events of my story took place, I just didn't write about it.
-The central theme of my story is censorship, and how it affects society.
-My story is perfect in every way.
What degree of control an author has over the "canon" of his work? There are two opposing concepts on that issue, roughly described here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_the_Author
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/WordOfGod
Which of those you subscribe to?
Personally, I lean towards "the death of the author" concept. Once an author publishes the text, it ceases to belong only to him and starts to live independently of the author. I'd even say that if the author wants for us to know some trivia about a character, he should have published it in his work.
Which ones of these statements made (post-publlication, word-of-god style) by the author are to be accepted unquestionably in regards to literary analysis, and which can be challenged? (No one of these statements appeared in the text of the original work):
-Character X has blue eyes.
-Character X is very smart.
-Character X is morally justified in his actions.
-Villainous character Y actually redeemed himself while the events of my story took place, I just didn't write about it.
-The central theme of my story is censorship, and how it affects society.
-My story is perfect in every way.