An adolescent's concept of the
middle ages, or an adolescent boy's concept: how many are like mine?
A lot of my imagination has always centered around food, and my
fantasies of Medieval meals owed their bulk to the pot roast dinners
we often had in my family while I was growing up. There seemed
something anachronistic and archaic about a huge hunk of meat on a
platter; I think this is universal, judging by the portrayals I've
seen in popular media and the wide appeal of turkey drumsticks at
Renfaires. Eating large quantities of meat is typically understood
as a manly taste, and there is something nearly exclusively masculine
about the appeal of a mythical Dark Ages that goes hand in hand with
an enjoyment of fantasy role-playing games and their derivative
fiction, as well as the accompanying art that teeters on the edge of
the pornographic. It's more cave man than anything, and that
adolescent male attraction to the Dark Ages has little to do with
chronology and almost everything to do with the shagginess that
Umberto Eco astutely pointed out in “Dreaming of the Middle Ages.”
Cave men with castles for caves and iron swords instead of flint
axes. Yet somehow their women achieve modern nutrition and hygiene.
(A
Dungeons & Dragons manual I once had, Creative Campaigning,
suggested setting a campaign in a stone age and included a reduced
magic system to go along with the primitive conditions. I now think
that's totally backward: the more primitive the technology and
economy, the more pervasive the magic. That game designers should
fail to see that speaks to the psychological, historical and
mythological ignorance of their society.)
Since
in my childhood home we generally had mashed potatoes and gravy with
pot roast, I took for granted the Medieval character and even
provenance that I projected on them. Not just mashed potatoes but
those soggy ones that have been cooked with beef and onions in a slow
cooker, absorbing the juice. The whole package of meat, onions and
potatoes, whether the meat stays in a chunk or gets cut up for stew,
is unconsciously imported into masculine fantasies. In the past few
years I've done NaNoWriMo there's been a running joke about stew on
the fantasy forum, stemming probably from a question in David J.
Parker's Fantasy Novelist's Exam: “Do you not realize it takes
hours to make a good stew, making it a poor choice for an 'on the
road' meal?”
Even
to this day, when I hear or read the word “Lombard” I have to
fight to keep the taste and feeling of mashed potatoes and Tabasco
sauce out of my mouth. That particular association comes from
history books I read when I was 17: the fall of the Roman Empire, the
barbarian invasions, the desert fathers. But they said nothing about
food, so all throughout I held in my mind a picture of barbarians
newly established in appropriated Roman castelli, eating mashed
potatoes. This was also shortly after I had taken a great liking to
Tabasco sauce and often put it on my mashed potatoes, mixing it in
until they turned pink. So for me the Dark Ages came to taste like
two American things that were unknown in Europe at that time. I
didn't know that; I had only the vaguest idea of the history of food
and didn't realize how enormously important staple food crops are in
economy, technology and politics, what a difference potatoes really
made in Europe in the modern era. My interest in history was a means
to an end of fertilizing fantasy; it still is to a great extent, as I
think it should be for everyone if the world is to change for the
better. But my fantasies then were more narcissistic than the
utopian dreams that my spiritual conversions have since engendered,
and I had less factual knowledge to help me emerge from the
ethnocentric Anglo-American adolescent dreams that I swam in.
So
I didn't know the difference between old world and new world crops.
I don't want to pin the whole rap for that on Tolkien: as a mythical
world, Middle Earth has no reason to pretend to any historical
accuracy, being a mythical creation (and Sam cooking rabbit stew in
Ithilien makes sense in its context).
But
the way the fantasy genre has evolved since then has led to the
irresponsible behavior lampooned so well in the Fantasy Novelist's
Exam: trying to copy your inspirations without doing your research.
Over the past few years there's been a lot of debate online about the
race or color of characters in fantasy fiction vis-a-vis “historical
accuracy.” I haven't dug deeply into that or followed very
closely, mostly because it has always seemed self-evident to me that
if you're writing or playing fantasy then you don't need to be
“historically accurate.” But if you are writing a fantasy
actually set in medieval Europe, then you're obligated to take into
account the relations of trade, religion and scholarship that brought
people of different races in contact with each other then and there.
As a teenager I got an education about Saracens from Judith Tarr's
Ars Magica. That novel was published in 1989, and of course
Ursula LeGuin's Earthsea novels with their multiracial cast
are even older, and not beholden to any concerns for historical
accuracy, whatever shallow resemblance their props might have to
medieval stuff.
Is
the stereotype of a medieval European fantasy landscape – full of
castles, monsters, knights errant and damsels in distress all white – more of a notion in the
minds of amateur male authors than a reflection of how the genre
really goes? It might go back to Ariosto after all, as I mentioned
in a previous post: Orlando Furioso is a classic adolescent
male fantasy and its European point of view recoils in disgust from
black characters and even paints the Princess of Cathay as blond.
But I'm not well-read in modern fantasy; I hardly touched it for
years until I started on Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time series
about 11 years ago. It was a welcome re-entry for me because of all
that it does right: a multi-racial cast, world-wide trade networks
over millennia of history (so potatoes, tobacco etc. make sense,
though he keeps maize and tomatoes isolated in the desert to add
color in winking asides), and only the most superficial resemblance
to “medieval Europe.” It's such a popular series I guess I
figured it was typical of how the genre developed while I wasn't
looking (I wonder if he was inspired at all by Delany's subversive
Return to NeverΓΏon
series with its blond barbarians and child empress).
I fear I'm wrong, based on what I have read from people about what is considered “typical” fantasy – people who I assume have read much more of it than I have. I might like to call it something like White Boy Fantasy with Potatoes: adopting medieval trappings like long swords, armor and castles, and even trying to make these as “accurate” as you can, while blithely including in your misty “northern European” setting blatant anachronisms like potatoes (or pumpkins, like I saw in the Gargoyles TV cartoon series), sewers, cheap soap, or the grosser absurdities like chicks in chainmail . . . but keeping everyone white (with the possible exception of black-skinned evil underground elves) because, forsooth, there were no black people in northern Europe “back then!” This does deserve criticism as narrow-minded: there's not much excuse for it in this century, and I think it's the real butt of Parker's jokes in his exam, much more than Robert Jordan's feminist heroines. White Boy Fantasy with Potatoes might draw from Tolkien, but it leaves off from the mythic resonance that gave his work its sense, settling its roots more in modern American experience. WBFwP is a product of 20th century industrialized middle-class teenage life, along with drive-through fast food, high school romance movies and prog rock. It's gratifying to think that I might extrapolate from my own psychic experience to understand the appeal of a typical and popular genre, but it's sad to think that it should be so typical.
I
have to state that my experience with fantasy as a teenager was more
with gaming than fiction, and I wonder how many others have
experienced similar. The “Fantasy Novelist's Exam” takes obvious
aim at the practice of importing game mechanics into novels, as in
the series built on the D&D franchise: Dragonlance,
Forgotten Realms and probably others that I don't know about.
I read Dragonlance books as a teenager and I bristled when
others dissed them. At the time I found a lot of value in them (I
liked them much more than Forgotten Realms which I abandoned
halfway through the first volume). I don't know what I would think
of them if I were to re-read them now; my intent here isn't to judge
their literary value. I believe that, whatever literary value they
may achieve, they still ought to be considered as belonging to the
gaming world, separate from “the fantasy genre” as a whole,
inasmuch as authors working in the wider genre, though they may be
building from common tropes, have more leeway than those who are
bound to a set of game mechanics. Some things are more appropriate
for games than for novels, and I've become convinced that what makes
for good gaming and good fiction are usually opposites.
How
many of the authors writing in the freedom of the wider fantasy genre
have really taken that leeway though? Again, my ignorance. I turned
my back on the genre because I judged it as I have seen it judged by
others: overrun by white boys who want to rove through northern
European or North American-looking settings, slaying monsters
(including orcs who sound like Turks, or is it the other way
around?), eating meat and potatoes, and making love to centerfold
models in fur or chainmail bikinis – all without encountering
inconveniently different people who would challenge the comfortable
demography of their actual suburban lives. I might have judged
unfairly; I would like to think so – again, I'd like to think that
those white boys (whom I can totally empathize with, alas) are mostly
the fans and amateur writers rather than the published authors.
But
whatever the genre's past might have been, I'm discovering exciting
new work by authors like N.K. Jemisin, whose Hundred Thousand
Kingdoms I recently read. There's some fantasy for you! - drawn
from an obviously wide foundation in psychology, politics, economics;
and a rich life experience of living, working and studying in many
places. I've recently read others whose settings are modeled on
earthly history and geography away from the misty wilds: the eastern
Mediterranean for Megan Whalen Turner, and the urban Renaissance for
Rachel Hartman. They show evidence of conscientious historical
research and that is gratifying, even if they come across more as
fenced gardens than as worlds (how much more do I have a right to
expect? The pioneers of the novel form itself didn't do years of
exhaustive world-building: they focused on a few people in one time
and place). There seems to be a growing appreciation for
historically-modeled fantasy, which is what I started trying to write
over 10 years ago. I'd better finish it soon; I'd hate to miss the
right moment to get it published.
2 comments:
Try the Theft of Swords by Michael J. Sullivan and see what you think of that.
Thanks Ethan, I will.
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