Standing the Test of Time

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inca

Lance-Constable
Mar 15, 2011
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#1
I have split the following post from The Last Continent Discussion to this dedicated thread as I think this is a topic worth discussing.

Tony.
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raisindot said:
With a few exceptions (such as Pterry), English-language writing has been in decline for decades, keeping pace with the declining literary IQ of readers in general.
On the other hand, you are breaking up the time period in much smaller steps (decades for the 1900's, centuries before that). Limit it to 100-year periods and you can come up with 3 writers that will be 'classical'.

We just haven't had that great filter of a few hundred years to judge.
There's lots of rubbish out there, sure enough, because there is just a whole lot of books out there. And I for one find it easier to give classical writers some leeway on writing. If Romeo and Juliet were written today, I'm not sure if I would have appreciated it the same (especially the language. It may be powerful but it is also not something to read relaxingly), and part of its power is in that it is something we can still relate to today.
 

Dotsie

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Jul 28, 2008
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#2
There has been an almighty amount of crap written throughout the centuries. The only reason that we might think writing was better hundreds of years ago is that only the good stuff survived.

Certainly the written language has evolved, but like biological evolution, it's neither better nor worse, just different.
 

Tonyblack

Super Moderator
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Jul 25, 2008
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#3
Dotsie said:
There has been an almighty amount of crap written throughout the centuries. The only reason that we might think writing was better hundreds of years ago is that only the good stuff survived.

Certainly the written language has evolved, but like biological evolution, it's neither better nor worse, just different.
Amen to that! There's nothing like the test of time to sort out the rubbish! :laugh:

Somehow I really think that Terry's books will survive the test of time and people will still be reading them in decades, maybe even centuries to come.

Some of his books will, I think survive better than others. I'm not sure about Last Continent. Maybe people will read it in the future and wonder what the hell he's going on about. :laugh:
 

Willem

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Jan 11, 2010
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#4
Tonyblack said:
Somehow I really think that Terry's books will survive the test of time and people will still be reading them in decades, maybe even centuries to come.
That's an interesting thought. Which would you consider to be the 'timeless' books? We can probably count out Moving Pictures and Soul Music - too many contemperary references. Small Gods seems a likely (and maybe the only) candidate.
 

Willem

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Jan 11, 2010
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#6
Nah the Egypt pyramids will have disappeared by then, there's this bird that keeps flying to it and sharpen it's beak on them each year. Shouldn't take long before it's ground down. Meaning even fewer will understand this book then than they do now :)
 

Penfold

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Dec 29, 2009
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#7
Tonyblack said:
Somehow I really think that Terry's books will survive the test of time and people will still be reading them in decades, maybe even centuries to come.
I was thinking along similar lines that in 500 years time or so would kids, towing their hover satchels, be going into school complaining about having 'double Pratchett' like the way some of my friends used to complain about double periods of Shakespeare? And would a couple of kids in the class be inspired to read other 'old classics' as a result? :laugh:
 

Tonyblack

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#8
The thing about Terry's work is that he writes primarily about people and the way the act and react. I don't think people change that much over the years, which makes the books relevant.
 

pip

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Sep 3, 2010
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#9
Its a curious question. I agree with Tony though. Good character writing bridge gaps of time so characters like vimes and granny would still be interesting in the future giving this books a chance at timelessness. Vorbis and Pteppic won't ;)
 

raisindot

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Oct 1, 2009
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#10
Tonyblack said:
Somehow I really think that Terry's books will survive the test of time and people will still be reading them in decades, maybe even centuries to come.
Dunno about that. Much as I love PTerry, I don't see the books having significant 'lasting' power. Partly I think it's because, as others have said, they have too many contemporary references that no one will remember a hundred years from now.

Also, I think being in the SF/fantasy genre also hurts its longevity. I mean, how many fantasy or fantastical books written a hundred years ago are still widely read today? The only reason anyone reads Frank Baum's Wizard of Oz series or the Peter Pan series or even Burrough's Tarzan series is because people read the books after seeing the movies. But you don't find huge numbers of people outside certain SF groups reading or discussing HP Lovecraft's books, as influential as they were at the time.

If DW books continued to be widely read a hundred years from now it will mainly be because of their accessibility; being online, you'll never need to find an out of print hardcover and they'll be rediscovered through searches and online discussions. But I think they'll remembered as pieces of their time, rather than as 'timeless classics.'
 
Nov 21, 2010
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#11
Penfold said:
Tonyblack said:
Somehow I really think that Terry's books will survive the test of time and people will still be reading them in decades, maybe even centuries to come.
I was thinking along similar lines that in 500 years time or so would kids, towing their hover satchels, be going into school complaining about having 'double Pratchett' like the way some of my friends used to complain about double periods of Shakespeare? And would a couple of kids in the class be inspired to read other 'old classics' as a result? :laugh:
I've always thought there were similarities between Shakespeare and Pratchett, afterall he was a playwright writing for the people, to entertain them in his own time.
 

Tonyblack

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#12
Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift was a fantastical book written much more than 100 years ago. It was full of satire based on contemporary references and yet it's still widely read and relevant.

Swift, like Terry, wrote about the human condition. I couldn't believe how much Gulliver's Travels still had a lot to say to the 21st Century when I read it. :)
 

inca

Lance-Constable
Mar 15, 2011
12
1,650
#13
I think most of the discworld-books can stand the test of time for quite a while. The lighter parody books with lots of reference go out of date relatively quickly (although... not even that fast, because while I can't relate directly to most of the actual references in for example Moving Pictures, lots of the cliches have moved into the general domain and continue to live on through many more parodies and references.)

But Small Gods, Thief of Time, the Watch-books, I think they will continue to be liked for a long time, lots of themes are timeless (like wars, conquering land, killing people. I'm sure humans will continue to relate to that for a looooong time to come...)
Certain things will probably go out of style: I can imagine the running Disorganiser-jokes will not be as funny in a hundred years. And I'm also sure we're missing such subtleties in older stories as well. But that doesn't matter, does it?

I liked Gulliver's travels as well. (That's one I'm sure we don't grasp all subtleties but where it also doesn't matter if you miss a few.)
 

Tonyblack

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#14
pip said:
Its a curious question. I agree with Tony though. Good character writing bridge gaps of time so characters like vimes and granny would still be interesting in the future giving this books a chance at timelessness. Vorbis and Pteppic won't ;)
I think you mean Dios. ;)

Actually, even Pyramids will, I feel, stand the test of time far more than Moving Pictures or, to a degree, Soul Music. Pyramids is about a country that almost destroys itself by sticking rigidly to tradition. Somehow I don't think that will ever go out of fashion.
 

Jan Van Quirm

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Nov 7, 2008
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#16
inca said:
Certain things will probably go out of style: I can imagine the running Disorganiser-jokes will not be as funny in a hundred years. And I'm also sure we're missing such subtleties in older stories as well. But that doesn't matter, does it?

I liked Gulliver's travels as well. (That's one I'm sure we don't grasp all subtleties but where it also doesn't matter if you miss a few.)
I think those kind of things can still ring bells even though technology advances? :) Reason for my thinking that is something from Jane Austen's Emma where one of the characters I don't like too much, Frank Churchill is mending Mrs. Bates spectacles for her - a seemingly uncharacteristic charitable act at the time (as we don't know he's secretly engaged to her grand-daughter, Jane Fairfax). It's actually really touching to 'see' him sitting there fiddling around with the specs for the poor old lady, who's the impoverished widow of the former parson whilst Frank is 'the child of good fortune' with doting rich relatives and the love of the odiously talented Jane Fairfax (don't like her much either! :laugh: ).

So that was written about 200 years ago but you can still visualise it and how it was a truly kind act, even though he was having fun at his secret fiancee's family's expense with Emma, even though we've got contacts and laser surgery etc. Time organisation's something that's a very subjectively universal, human thing, in that the more time and technology you have at your disposal in theory, the less time you have to muck about with organising it ;)

It's broad concepts more I think and impatient busy people will still be a constant in the same way that we need chairs to sit on and beds to sleep in etc :laugh:
 

pip

Sergeant-at-Arms
Sep 3, 2010
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#18
Oops . i actually do like small gods. Meant dios as tony quietly pointed out. :laugh:

Watched an interesting documentry on Chaucer a month ago and found it quiet interesting that he broke the mould in producing his work. Writing in english was seen as a huge mistake and his style and humour was seen as controversial. People thought he would disapear into obscurity.
Also Dickens was esentially a serial writer similar in cultural position to soap operas today so what stands the test of time can't be predicted from previous generations. Whos to say that fantasy isn't the stand out for thsi generation in years to come. just because it hasn't been before means nothing.
 

Tonyblack

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Jul 25, 2008
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#19
Other fantastical writers who are still widely read include Jules Verne, H.G. Wells, Mark Twain - even some of Shakespeare's plays could be considered fantasy. :laugh:
 

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