One Hit Noob said:
boradis said:
One Hit Noob said:
Did you also realize he fits the term for "normally insane"? And not all his works have to do with racism or sexism.
A) There is no insanity defense for bigotry.
B) It doesn't change his subtext.
Whoa, hold on a minute, I am going to dissect your post first.
From the wikipedia article you "cited", his views were considered extreme, but "cultural". That means he got it from the people around him in his era.
Would you please explain your quotation marks around "cite?" I did cite a Wikipedia article rather than pretend to, as your quote marks imply.
But as to your statement, you have reiterated what I had said and what Wikipedia explained in depth:
A) He was a bigot in a society considerably more bigoted than much of the modern era.
B) Even for that society he was an extremist.
One Hit Noob said:
Very hateful, but soon enough, after he traveled to many many places, his intolerance loosened after meeting people of different ethnicities.
I've seen this asserted but never cited. Which is to say I've never seen anything written by Lovecraft himself in which he says, "Sorry about all that race war stuff."
Yes he married a Jewish woman whom he considered to have been "well assimilated" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H._P._Lovecraft#Race.2C_ethnicity.2C_and_class which of course meant he felt she could "pass" for white.
One Hit Noob said:
Just because an author has different views from others does not mean people should avoid his works all together. (....) Ridiculous, what you basically said was call Cthulu a woman or an asian, african, etc.
Here's a book specifically about Lovecraft that can educate you on the topic of subext and some of its uses in fiction:
http://books.google.com/books?id=FnXbrXhKfyIC&lpg=PR12&ots=fw36I4HwGL&dq=%22call%20of%20cthulhu%22%20literary%20subtext&pg=PR11#v=onepage&q=%22call%20of%20cthulhu%22%20literary%20subtext&f=false
But the short answer is: Yes.
Every story ever written contains the author's opinions about something in the real world.
From my first link above http://www.contrasoma.com/writing/lovecraft.html we have this:
Perhaps Lovecraft's most-lauded story, "The Shadow Over Innsmouth" incorporates many of the same themes as "The Lurking Fear": the degeneration of large communal groups via miscegenation and the unchecked reproduction of immigrant populations as a source of terror.
So, yeah. It's not just a story about scary fish men. The "hidden" nature of this particular iceberg of paranoia and disgust is his intense fear of any community of immigrants from a country besides his beloved England. The moral and message is this: If your English dad married a lady from Morocco or wherever then you're just as subhuman as her and will eventually "turn into one." It's a diatribe against interracial marriage. As the son of an interracial couple, I cannot express how repugnant that is.
It's not like he was an electrician who happened to hate Italians, or an airline pilot who thought Asians were subhuman. He was a writer of fiction which makes his views relevant to his work even had he tried to suppress his opinions. And he was far from circumspect.
The one good thing I can think to say about him is that he became an atheist early in his life and remained so. But that one rational decision does not make up for a lifetime spent maxing out the cultural ills of his era.
Before I learned about the bigoted side of him I too was a bit of a fan. He was definitely a talented wordsmith whose narrative poured off the page smooth as cream -- blasphemous, pulsating cream with blinking eyes and rudimentary tentacles breaking the skin.
But exactly like an encounter with one of his eldritch horrors from beyond the void, what has been seen cannot be unseen. You have the right to continue rationalizing and close your eyes to the subtext. You can choose to ignore what he was actually
saying and read his work on only the most superficial, childish level.
"Oohh, octopus men are gross and scary! Eeek!"
But to do so you must ignore the fact that every disgusting thing in his stories is an intentional metaphor or analogy for people of any ethnicity besides his own, his distrust of science, and his disgust at women and sexuality.
So please, go ahead. Enjoy the thinly veiled propaganda of a man who's most every view stands against the cultural progress of the last 100 years.
But it doesn't change the fact you're consuming a fecal mass of hate made tolerable by a thin frosting of prose.