What Defines a Classic?
- MsLisa
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What Defines a Classic?
- Irene C
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Agree and also i think the context of society has a part in choosing a classic, for example most books that are considered classics today are story that show us a reality completely different to what we have now.Irene C wrote: ↑23 Sep 2018, 14:10 Personally, I think a book has to be at least 10-15 years old, and really, most books that we can agree are classics are older than that so that their status is widely agreed on. Then I think a classic has real literary quality. So Stephen King's books are great, but they're plot-driven in a way that isn't really literary, in a way that will endure the way that, y'know, Shakespeare's plays or the Austen novels (or the Twain novels) have.
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I guess there is no criteria that a classic book has to fit, it just often challenges society’s common thesis. If that makes sense.
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If 10-15 years is the criteria then I guess Harry Potter books are classic now?? Makes me feel old since I grew up reading them, waiting for each new book to be releasedIrene C wrote: ↑23 Sep 2018, 14:10 Personally, I think a book has to be at least 10-15 years old, and really, most books that we can agree are classics are older than that so that their status is widely agreed on. Then I think a classic has real literary quality. So Stephen King's books are great, but they're plot-driven in a way that isn't really literary, in a way that will endure the way that, y'know, Shakespeare's plays or the Austen novels (or the Twain novels) have.

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