It’s not any more derogatory than ‘fanfic’. Which is to say, it’s a bit derogatory if you think it’s lazy of the author not to have bothered to create his own universe to write a story in.
Hell, it’s not even just non-nerdish fiction. This “cluster of brains” has a pretty narrow definition of “nerdish fiction” as well.
The thin slice of nerd culture that’s actually observed and celebrated here has some serious issues with subtlety, context and communication not on their terms. It’s funny; there are lots of nerd-friendly, genre-obsessed literary circles but I never see mystery or horror fans give themselves these sorts of airs, except for that thin slice for whom only Lovecraft and perhaps his closest contemporaries are of any interest in an otherwise SF/F-dominated palate.
(And it’s not like the author of that piece is a genre/fandom outsider confident in her own superiority over the anoraks—look at the descriptions of some of her books; those premises are inherently fantastical, with as much weird interesting fanciful shit as anything popular here, and they’re explored in detail with lots of layers of both direct and subtle exploration—and she can actually fucking write.)
Don’t worry, I’m sure someone will be along to chastise us about opportunity cost, or other wordy rationalizations for why they don’t care which basically boil down to “I d’wanna.”
He’s casting aspersions on all literature that is not to his taste. “Earthfic” as a derogatory term for non-SF/F stuff.
It’s not any more derogatory than ‘fanfic’. Which is to say, it’s a bit derogatory if you think it’s lazy of the author not to have bothered to create his own universe to write a story in.
.
Hell, it’s not even just non-nerdish fiction. This “cluster of brains” has a pretty narrow definition of “nerdish fiction” as well.
The thin slice of nerd culture that’s actually observed and celebrated here has some serious issues with subtlety, context and communication not on their terms. It’s funny; there are lots of nerd-friendly, genre-obsessed literary circles but I never see mystery or horror fans give themselves these sorts of airs, except for that thin slice for whom only Lovecraft and perhaps his closest contemporaries are of any interest in an otherwise SF/F-dominated palate.
(And it’s not like the author of that piece is a genre/fandom outsider confident in her own superiority over the anoraks—look at the descriptions of some of her books; those premises are inherently fantastical, with as much weird interesting fanciful shit as anything popular here, and they’re explored in detail with lots of layers of both direct and subtle exploration—and she can actually fucking write.)
.
Don’t worry, I’m sure someone will be along to chastise us about opportunity cost, or other wordy rationalizations for why they don’t care which basically boil down to “I d’wanna.”
I’m only going to point out that you really managed to put on some airs while criticizing others for putting on airs.