JimB said:
It matters because it affects people. It affected Mr. Okorafor, after all.
Everything and nothing affects people. The world does not exist but for our own internal narrative. The choice to let the views of a long dead man affect your current state is still an active choice. You must seek to engage that portion of history, and in doing so, you are critiquing the past.
Again, I don't disagree with the points about H.P. Lovecraft, but why exactly should I be okay with politicizing this award? Why should I care as to how people feel about H.P. Lovecraft? Why should we 'fix' a historical icon?
Is it because people are ignorant as to the iconic status? Is it because the historical Lovecraft offends them?
Political statements are fine. Don't accept an award if you feel it does more for your causes that way, but I see no reason to change the bust because of it. H.P. lovecraft is still one of the most influential authors of all time and there is really nothing that anyone has said on the matter that has even begun to address the fact that this has no basis in literary merit or accomplishment, which is what the award purportedly celebrates.
JimB said:
I don't care whether people honor a dead man. Honor isn't doing him any good any more, on account of him being dead and all. As such, I will not prioritize what people want a dead man to be entitled to over the living people who have to deal with that fallout.
The fallout of being offended by the beliefs of a man dead long before you were born?
The Literary Canon is a thing that exists, though I'm sure you would find it very offensive. It happens to have a lot of emotionally moving pieces in it. Even pieces that would make you question the purpose of living. People have to deal with the fallout of the literary canon everyday.
Should we remove references to offensive material so that people don't have to deal with the fallout of it?
JimB said:
No, I'm pretty sure what I said is, it's fucked up to give to a black author a statue of a man who thought that author was a half-beast filled with vice, created by the gods to bridge the gap between human and animal.
And yet it's still traditional to give doctors busts of Hippocrates whilst adorning private and state medical facilities with religious iconography harkening back to a mercantile god. These things violate the separation of church and state, romanticize a man to the living embodiment of medical ethics and... are entirely detached from their historic context into one of modern iconography.
Go figure right? Busts and Symbols become detached from the real and instead stand in for an ideal.
JimB said:
I...I don't know how else to say it. I already said. Because it's a component of the discussion, and ignoring that is a disservice to your (the specific you) opponent and to the audience. It makes them less likely to agree with your position because you (the specific you) won't address what concerns them.
It's still not remotely consequential, so, I don't much care for it. The critisism is fine, the calling for Lovecraft to be scrubbed from the award due to what amount to 'he had antiquated views' (though far more emotionally charged because: pathos) is not something I can take seriously. Period.
JimB said:
Neither is describing as censorship an act that does not alter, eliminate, or reduce ease of access to a person's works mandated by the state. If you want to describe this as an organization bending to pressure from its consumers, then that's fine, but it's not censorship, it's capitalism. Passing this off as censorship smacks of hysteria. Likewise, I don't think I need to say how pointing out the things a person is documented as saying counts as revisionism.
Casting historical views against modern morality is an act of revisionism. It is implying that morality is consistent through history, which simply isn't true. The norms and standards of society have shifted and changed near yearly basis. Attempting to present history in a light that reflects modern sensibilities regardless of the simple reality of the situation revises history.
Yes, this is a form of censorship. It is the removal of an Icon (Symbol, which conveys information) because it is considered harmful. That's pretty much the definition of censorship, even if it doesn't involve you striking through a piece of paper with a black felt pen.