What do these critics and academics even mean when they call adult literature serious? This descriptor gets thrown around but never defined. Were I to make the same reductive assessment of all adult literature that the genreโs critics make of YA fiction, then the serious novel would be about a middle-aged person struggling with career collapse and sexual frustration. I donโt want to belittle these topics, but theyโre only serious to sexually frustrated middle-aged people, coincidentally being the same narrow demographic that adult literature seems to serve. And they clearly donโt read as many books as their kids.
It amazes me that supposed experts in critical theory, textual analysis and semiotics cannot for the life of them recognize the use and societal relevance of large-scale allegory and metaphor in works of sf or YA. Itโs almost like they, say, are a little biased. But that couldnโt be, right?
Do read the Guardian piece, though. The conclusion is just great.
[…] “It amazes me that supposed experts in critical theory, textual analysis and semiotics cannot for the….” Social relevance doesn’t make a text a work of art, that’s the problem. A political manifesto might be extremely useful and super relevant but it isn’t necessarily a work of art. […]