an education in all the pop culture and historical references and cultural associations for symbols that are likely to be pieces should not be a requirement for someone to walk away having understood your point.
All works reference older works. They do this because they can’t start from ‘1 + 1 = 2’, and there is no point in reinventing the wheel when you can do something new with it.
Acting like indirectness and hiding everything beneath a vapid surface layer is the defining feature that separates prestigious “art” from slop is literally a CIA psyop playing off elitism.
Oh, I didn’t know that Shakespeare was being a CIA plant when he rmade references to Greek and Roman mythology. Or Euripedes when he parodied even older Greek writers.
Gatekeeping meaning behind specific forms of elite education respects no one
Right, so make that ‘elite education’ available to all so it’s no longer ‘elite’.
No shit. You still shouldn’t rely on references as the primary carriers of meaning when you have a point to make unless you’re writing for a very narrow audience that you know will get those specific references. You shouldn’t be relying on your audience recognizing a name as derived from a minor greek god, or that you’re structurally paralleling a book that’s on high school reading lists, or expecting them to have a grounding in 19th century cultural associations between symbols and colors for them to understand what you’re saying.
Shakespeare
Shakespeare was writing slop for hogs in a vulgar dialect. He was literally meeting the public where they were in language they would understand and packaged with fart jokes they would enjoy.
a CIA plant when he rmade references to Greek and Roman mythology.
Remember that I said that symbolism, allegory, and allusion are fun little treats, they’re something to fill out and reinforce a work or add foreshadowing. What I am criticizing is the practice of hiding one’s point behind them, of secreting it away in a post-truth realm of free interpretation where anyone can reasonably argue you’re trying to say whatever they want to imagine your point is.
If you have a point to make, it should be blunt, textual, and preferably repeated and symbolism etc should enter in as additional layers beyond that rather than instead of that.
Right, so make that ‘elite education’ available to all so it’s no longer ‘elite’.
You’re still going to have people who bounce off of it, or don’t retain all the mountains of possible works or concepts, or who don’t enjoy the process of unraveling the special smart-lad puzzle box you’ve crafted, and you still can’t get around the intractable fact that if the meaning of a work isn’t textual it may as well literally be whatever bullshit any given reader claims it is.
All works reference older works. They do this because they can’t start from ‘1 + 1 = 2’, and there is no point in reinventing the wheel when you can do something new with it.
Oh, I didn’t know that Shakespeare was being a CIA plant when he rmade references to Greek and Roman mythology. Or Euripedes when he parodied even older Greek writers.
Right, so make that ‘elite education’ available to all so it’s no longer ‘elite’.
No shit. You still shouldn’t rely on references as the primary carriers of meaning when you have a point to make unless you’re writing for a very narrow audience that you know will get those specific references. You shouldn’t be relying on your audience recognizing a name as derived from a minor greek god, or that you’re structurally paralleling a book that’s on high school reading lists, or expecting them to have a grounding in 19th century cultural associations between symbols and colors for them to understand what you’re saying.
Shakespeare was writing slop for hogs in a vulgar dialect. He was literally meeting the public where they were in language they would understand and packaged with fart jokes they would enjoy.
Remember that I said that symbolism, allegory, and allusion are fun little treats, they’re something to fill out and reinforce a work or add foreshadowing. What I am criticizing is the practice of hiding one’s point behind them, of secreting it away in a post-truth realm of free interpretation where anyone can reasonably argue you’re trying to say whatever they want to imagine your point is.
If you have a point to make, it should be blunt, textual, and preferably repeated and symbolism etc should enter in as additional layers beyond that rather than instead of that.
You’re still going to have people who bounce off of it, or don’t retain all the mountains of possible works or concepts, or who don’t enjoy the process of unraveling the special smart-lad puzzle box you’ve crafted, and you still can’t get around the intractable fact that if the meaning of a work isn’t textual it may as well literally be whatever bullshit any given reader claims it is.
stop
Why?