Authors and Anonymity
- JRO
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Authors and Anonymity
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I get why society deems transparency an important value but I also feel like 100% transparency isn't necessary in everything. I actually like when there's a bit of mystery regarding the author.

- DATo
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― Steven Wright
- DB44
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Until recently judging an author's work by reference to their life was a relatively harmless practice. Sadly this is no longer the case. Identity politics has intruded into the world of fiction. So we see the ridiculous idea of cultural appropriation as applied to fiction. The idea that a group has some form of proprietorship over its identity, so no one outside that group is entitled to write about it. Thus we have a person who I will not name who walked out of Lionel Shriver's keynote address at the Brisbane Writer's Festival for this very reason and then very publicly blogged about it. We also see various posts around the net on what writer's should not write about or how they should write about particular groups. It reminds me of Alice Sheldon writing as James Tiptree Jr. Much time was wasted in argument over whether her stories were in fact written by a man or a woman. It is fair to say that no definitive conclusion was reached until the time her identity was exposed. But why did it matter? Man or woman, she wrote some of the greatest SyFy short stories I have ever had the pleasure of reading. Also, we have the tales of the same works being submitted under one name and rejected, only to be submitted under another and accepted or even acclaimed. Sometimes the advantage is to be found in a name suggesting a minority group or a female, some in a name suggesting male or mainstream. This is a sad indictment on those to whom the works are submitted. Ironically, anonymous submissions may avoid these problems, although it is possible they may not be allowed or attract their own form of discrimination.
So my view is judge a work on its merits. It is simply not relevant whether the author is male or female, or a member or not of a particular group. In my view there is no such thing as "cultural appropriation" in this sense. But in the current climate I can well see that more authors may wish to avail themselves of the cloak of anonymity, if only to avoid the unwelcome attentions of the thought police.
- BelleReadsNietzsche
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- flaming_quills
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- Dragonsend
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- Amanda Deck
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- Nisha Ward
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Does that mean we need to examine every aspect of an author's life if they're a white man writing about, say, a black man's experiences in London for example? No, but we should be aware of how that affects the work that is produced as no writing is done in a vacuum.
Tl;dr Identity politics are a part of fiction whether we agree with them or not, but we don't need to know an author's private life if they want it to remain private.
- Letora
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- Artizi
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- NetMassimo
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Massimo
- DD129
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- NetMassimo
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Massimo
- LinaMueller
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You an I, tonight!
You may forget the warmth he gave,
I will forget the light.
When you have done, pray tell me
That I my thoughts may dim;
Haste! lest while you're lagging.
I may remember him!
Emily Dickinson