Stars of David
Oct. 4th, 2004 12:58 pmFor those who are interested, the October issue of the San Diego Jewish Journal is running an article on Judaism and science fiction, and I've been quoted a few times.
You can find the article here:
http://www.sdjewishjournal.com/stories/cover_oct04.html
You can find the article here:
http://www.sdjewishjournal.com/stories/cover_oct04.html
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Date: 2004-10-04 10:05 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-04 10:07 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-04 11:35 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-04 12:00 pm (UTC)A different way of looking at things than I do. And told me a lot I didn't know. I had no idea there were so many Jewish writers that I read and enjoyed.
I, personally, believe the author is stretching to Id the themes as Jewish. Many of them are "human" themes, in my opinion.
But then, I was raised athetist and currently don't believe I know enough to say what is really out there, so I have sorta a skewed view when it comes to religion.
I would love to pick your brain about Jewish culture & customs, though, because I literally have almost no idea what they are.
Zhaneel
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Date: 2004-10-04 12:05 pm (UTC)Which themes do you see as "human"? It's possible for them to be both humanistic and Jewish. For example, Tikkun Olam ("repairing the world") could be considered something that humans should just do, no matter what. But from the Jewish perspective there is also a religious aspect to it.
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Date: 2004-10-04 12:11 pm (UTC)I don't dispute that one can find religious aspects within that story, or that 3 Laws of Robotics are similiar to the 10 Commandments. I'm just saying that for someone raised outside of the Jewish tradition, those themes don't yell "Jewish" to me. Some savior stories yell out "Christian" to me, and your story "The Great Miracle" did fairly scream "Jewish" (duh, at least I know about the story of the oil and the lights). But I never thought of the 3 Laws of Robotics as akin to the 10 commandments. Nor did I even know that Frankenstein resembled an earlier Jewish tale.
What I have found is when anyone is trying to state that there are themes within literature, they will find them if they look hard enough. I'm sure someone could find religious themes in my work, even though I would never knowingly put that there or see it myself.
Zhaneel
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Date: 2004-10-04 12:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-04 12:27 pm (UTC)To give one example from my own work, there is nothing overtly Jewish in "TeleAbsence" (story about a black kid who sneaks into a VR school for a better education). However, as I was writing it, I remember keeping in mind that I wanted to demonstrate Tikkun Olam and a love of learning, based upon my own background.
I don't know if Asimov put anything Jewish into his development of the Zeroth Law of Robotics deliberately or unconsciously at all, but it seemed to me the argument could be made. I do know an amusing story about him though. A fellow writer once asked him why he doesn't put Jewish characters in his stories. He leaned over and whispered to her, "They all are."
For the most part, though, when I want to write a Jewish story, I tend to make it explicit (such as "The Great Miracle," which you mentioned).
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Date: 2004-10-04 12:29 pm (UTC)Sometimes people are right on the money. I wrote a story in my first year of college that had been banging around in my head since I was 13. Years later someone read it and told me it was about euthanasia. I looked it over, and they were right. I didn't know it when I wrote it, but it was there plain as day. The message mirror my feelings about it and my aunt had just passed away from a long fight with cancer when I was 13. So, it makes sense.
But there are things other people see in stories that I don't. And I'm sure I see reflections in stories that others don't. But I try not to say the author put something somewhere unless it is transparently obvious OR admittedly factually.
Zhaneel (Aka Dawn Burnell)
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Date: 2004-10-04 12:30 pm (UTC)Asimov once attended a lecture about SF, and in the middle of the talk, the speaker gave an interpretation of "Nightfall." It was completely contrary to anything Asimov meant when he wrote the story. He introduced himself to the speaker afterwards to tell him that he got the interpretation completely wrong. And the speaker replied, "Just because you wrote it, what makes you think you know everything that's in it?"
Somehow, that convinced Asimov that there may be themes in stories he never realized. I know that happens to me; people have pointed out to me after publication that "Kaddish for the Last Survivor" could be viewed as an argument against intermarriage, which was never my intention...
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Date: 2004-10-04 12:31 pm (UTC)And where can I track down TeleAbsence as I haven't read it?
Zhaneel
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Date: 2004-10-04 12:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-04 12:36 pm (UTC)I agree that a reader can get something out of a story that the author never put in. I maintain, however, that the reader should take responsibility and admit their own bias toward interpretation, rather than saying "The author meant..."
One of the commonalities is professors maintain that JRR Tolkien wrote LOTR as a mirror for WWII, while Tolkien maintained all throughout his life that such was not the case. I can see where people get that idea and I think Tolkien was affected by WWII, but I believe the author when he says he didn't intend to write the story that way.
Zhaneel
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Date: 2004-10-04 12:37 pm (UTC)For someone who isn't especially religious herself, I do enjoy learning about other people's views.
OTOH, something that has struck me is that you and gnomi seem to "need" to be offline an awful lot recently. Are those holidays? Or normal Shabbat [Saturday sunset to ??? Sunday] rules? [and here I make some horrible gaffe in my knowledge and profoundly apologize in advance].
Zhaneel
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Date: 2004-10-04 12:49 pm (UTC)Either that, or Michael's spending all his time over at AOL.
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Date: 2004-10-04 12:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-04 01:14 pm (UTC)Glad I could help with that self-promotion. I'll make sure it gets onto a wishlist/buying list somewhere.
Zhaneel
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Date: 2004-10-04 01:17 pm (UTC)Thanks.
And I read the FAQ about it and then hung my head in shame for said gaffe. ;-) All well, I'm just an unlearned girl anyhow.
Zhaneel
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Date: 2004-10-04 01:17 pm (UTC)Zhaneel
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Date: 2004-10-04 01:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-04 01:50 pm (UTC)It reminds me of how I read a few Spider Robinson stories, all of which referred to an incident that had happened in a minor character's life. It was the same incident, and clearly the event had happened for real to someone he knew...
As for tracking down "TeleAbsence," I see Steve has already taken care of promoting it in one venue. :-) It's also available for purchase as an e-book at Fictionwise.com
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Date: 2004-10-04 01:55 pm (UTC)And I see that others have explained our customs. :-) One must keep in mind, though, that different people have different levels of observance.
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Date: 2004-10-04 01:56 pm (UTC)The Mars novel is the one that never sold, which I must eventually rewrite.
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Date: 2004-10-04 02:33 pm (UTC)You & Fictionwise are going to bankrupt me.
Okay, not really since most of the stuff you have there is cheap, but I have to ask permission to put my micropay stuff in there.
Doooooomm.... ;-)
Zhaneel
In all seriousness, I am so happy you are readily availible on FictionWise. I love the service and will put it to use when I have published stuff so that readers can find my old work easily. Thank you, thank you, thank you for supporting technology.
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Date: 2004-10-04 09:19 pm (UTC)