Puritan wrote:Eh, giving people what they wanted to read doesn't make literature not great. Take Shakespeare. Highly revered as a superb playwright for centuries, his work is genius in its grasp of human emotions and the human mind and has wonderful plotlines, but at the same time he definately created characters, settings, and situations to please people. When you start to understand his archaic english, you realize he was actually quite crude at times to please his audience, but that doesn't take away from the greatness of his work.
Sure, Dickens wrote what people wanted to hear, but that aspect of his work (or the serializaion) doesn't remove his genius or heart. He was concerned with the exploitation of people that went on in his society and tried to expose some of it through his writing, often portraying a dark side of England many of the educated ignored or didn't see. I view him in the same way I view Shakespeare or O. Henry - a man who wrote popularized stories about what people wanted to hear, but didn't lose his genius because of it.
Puritan wrote:Eh, giving people what they wanted to read doesn't make literature not great.
Puritan wrote:Take Shakespeare. Highly revered as a superb playwright for centuries, his work is genius in its grasp of human emotions and the human mind and has wonderful plotlines, but at the same time he definately created characters, settings, and situations to please people. When you start to understand his archaic english, you realize he was actually quite crude at times to please his audience, but that doesn't take away from the greatness of his work.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 127 guests