Stofsk wrote:Now I'm sure there are exceptions to this, and since we've been talking about it I'd guess something like Tolkien saying that 'lotr isn't an allegory guys, just FYI' might count if you're analysing LotR for what the author intended. On the other hand, as an example I don't know if Tolkien intended for Frodo and Sam's relationship to be so gay, yet many interpret it that way (either for a laugh or for serious examination). If Tolkien did intend that then great, but if he didn't, it's no less valid so long as the text supports it.
This I have no problem with. My problem is when someone starts saying "this represents the..." and passing it off as fact. The only way I know of to make that statement and not begin it with "to me" is to use author intent. I'll admit that I tend to be very literal, and that that's a rather serious handicap when it comes to literary analysis, but I really do think that while "intent" may not be the best word for what I'm thinking of, you cannot divorce a story from its context and setting, and in fact I think those things really enhance a story.
Plus, as someone who likes to read and watch films and shows and storytelling in general, I think there's something vaguely conceited about wondering what the author intended about something. There's something about it that seems fallacious, almost like making an appeal to authority. 'SW is a kids show because Lucas said so' etc. I think it violates the compact an author has with the reader and the audience and depowers the reader and turns him into a passive participant rather than someone who can be active in the story. There is something to be said for how storytelling is a two-way street and what the author intended is not nearly as important as how the reader responds to it and uses his or her imagination to make the story come alive. Like picturing how a character looks in a novel when the description is vague or not complete. Stuff like that invites the reader to fill in the blanks. Same goes for film, we don't have to see everything to infer something happened off-screen. Otherwise you get into this ridiculous situation like the current SW fandom where the word canon gets thrown around a lot and people argue about what Lucas must have intended by certain lines (and you brought up a great example with Karen 'No Numbers' Traviss. Arguably the number of clonetroopers being low is something that comes from AotC anyway and thus ought to have the highest canon authority but Traviss is the one who must be wrong; see what I mean?), and if you don't see it onscreen It Didn't Happen.
No arguments there, although I will point out that "SW is a kids show" does provide important context to a number of issues, particularly when trying to understand production decisions, such as pacing. Another example where intent is relevant is how a particular media is consumed. While I enjoy watching TV shows on DVD, I really think that some of the experience gets lost that way. For highly episodic series, you lose the separation between episodes and they start feeling disjointed. For a highly plotted series or miniseries. I get the same feeling when reading novels that were originally serialized, or short story collections that were not originally published together. Those, along with the cases where intent IS knowable, are what I was thinking of as intent.
I guess, in my view, intent is something that can either be known or unknown, but if it IS known, I don't think it can really be ignored while still respecting the work as a whole.
Literary analysis as a concept leaves me wondering, "what makes my interpretation of this more or less valid than another person's interpretation," but that's the way my brain works. It really doesn't like questions that can't be answered. Heck, the reason I'm awake right now is that I had some sort of panic attack after a dream. I can remember what started it, too. I started literally thinking about nothing and trying to define it, and couldn't do it. I need bounds on my world.