CATS!!!
Or
Why Lord of Light
isn't Categorically Ambiguous
By Tariq Sachleben
I
promised you guys a cat, so I'll go ahead start with one.
… maybe
that’s a pop-tart. Maybe it's both. (It's probably both, and you'll likely want
to consider its feline attributes before making any decisions that could impact
it.)
Similar
ambiguity is often seen with the placement of Roger Zelazny's Lord of Light into either Fantasy or Science
Fiction. I appreciate the title of Jo Walton's editorial: "Fantasy
disguised as science fiction disguised as fantasy: Roger Zelazny's Lord of
Light" (full article available here). As Walton points out, Lord of Light's "gods" serve
as the primary rubbing point between the two genres as their abilities are
comprised of both Science Fictional (ie technological or rational) and
Fantastical (ie superstitious or magical) elements. To contribute my two cents
to the issue, the gods' underpinnings are entirely logical and within the
treatment of Science Fiction, however the leap of faith required to accept
those rationale is larger than typical and more closely approximates Fantasy. This
dissonance seems to irritate Walton.
One could
probably make an analogy between our two misfits, the Nyan Cat and Lord of Light, assuming "cat"
is replaced by "Fantasy" and "pop-tart" by "Science
Fiction" for the book. However, I'm at the point in my argument where any
analogy would break down. Why? Because I find the earlier dissonance
unnecessary due to the fact that I see Fantasy as an extension to the Hard-Soft
scale of Science Fiction. My reasoning is straightforward: while the Hard-Soft
scale is typically defined by the amount of exposition that is dedicated to
explaining plot elements, a congruent metric is the number of assumptions
needed by a reader to accept a given plot. If my logical inversion is unclear,
consider that lots of well written Hard Science Fiction doesn't age well. Using
the common definition, the best explanations that can be given are to say that
the exposition isn't relevant to modern audiences or that the author's
conclusions are faulty given modern knowledge.
I don't find these reasons compelling in this form, as they fail to
explain why Hard Science Fiction can be valid and still fail to engage its
audience. Using the assumption based definition, we can strengthen the second
statement to say that with the passage of time, an author's rationale can
become faulty, irrelevant, or trivial due to its logical grounding, making it
difficult, if not impossible for a modern audience to engage with the story.
Then by
what mechanism does Fantasy work into this? Good question, dear reader. It is
possible to quantify the assumptions necessary for a piece of Fantasy to be
believable. To generalize in a word - lots. So many in fact, the story becomes
impossible in the Given World. At first glance this would appear to put works
of fantasy at the very, very soft end
of the scale. However, I would argue that fantasy stories go beyond the limits
of the Hard-Soft scale (and, yes, I do see the Hard-Soft scale as finite).
Allow me to introduce the Rational-Fantastical scale of Speculative Fiction.
(Back to why the Nyan Cat analogy doesn't work, a similar chain of logic would
imply that cats and pop-tarts are categorically equivalent!)
Of
course, there is now the issue of where to draw lines between the different
subgenres. Hard Science Fiction vs Soft Science Fiction is trivial: who knows?
The distinction was blurry to start with and it remains blurry still!
Similarly, the divide between Soft Science Fiction and Fantasy is nearly
indistinguishable, but due to a different cause. To understand the reasoning,
you need to understand what I call the Theory of Fantastical Relativity. Due to
people having different experiences (by the theorem of "Duh!"), where one sees the difference between rationally
vague and entirely fantastical can fluctuate widely. This makes the divide hard
to pin down. One example of a piece of literature that seems to exist firmly in
the transitional region is the comic book X-Men.
"Genetic mutations" is the given rationale for characters' powers,
however not everyone is willing to accept this at face-value. Any scientist
will inform you that while genetic mutations are incapable of causing the
transformations shown in the comic, they will likely give you cancer; the
average reader of X-Men probably
doesn't care. As for the divide between High and Low Fantasy, I would say it
still exists, and that the extended scale suggests that a similar divide exists
within Science Fiction.
To
quickly tie things back together, Lord of
Light exists within the same border zone as X-Men. While its treatment is closer to the style of most Soft
Science Fiction, its rationale can float either way. Now, unfortunately word
count limitations prevent any further discourse, but before I go …
… I
thought you could do with another cat.
Tariq,
ReplyDeleteSo, paring down some of the exposition in your argument here, it seems like the real deciding factor of soft sf vs. fantasy is what does a reader find credible in the story, or choose to CARE about being credible or not, yes? If that's the case, then it seems that genre would be a construction that belongs not to authors or publishers, but to readers. Is that where you intended this to go, or just an extension of your logic?
If we're going to use the Nyan cat as a serious (or, hell, even un-serious) analog to fusing things together that don't belong, then whether it is more cat or more pop-tart is, again, in the eye of the beholder. The image seems constructed specifically to disrupt expectations and make us smile because of the pleasure of that benign, absurd disruption. Is ambiguity -- no matter who makes the call about how it can or can't be resolved -- not a bug, but a feature or speculative fiction, then? I'd say so. By forcing the reader to both interact with AND question what they have in their hands, the reader's offered surprise and delight (at least the potential for these) on at least two levels. How absurdity and disruption of reality is explained away, then, seems secondary to the fact that it CAN be, and how that's done is a choice that tells us perhaps more about the reader's view of reality than the text itself.
Best,
TT