Previous Entry Add to Memories Share Next Entry
Gareth Rees' "A Credo for Critics"
james_nicoll
I wouldn't have used "bad", myself, because there are reviews that are as inept as the lousiest of books and I want to reserve "bad" for them. I'd have used "negative". Although I guess inept might do.

Bad reviews are a basic fact of literary life, you might have thought. There are so many different kinds of literary taste, that no book can be all things to all readers. One person’s comfort reading is another’s trash, and what’s thought-provoking to one is high-faluting nonsense to another. But the essential subjectivity of taste is hard to keep in mind when it’s your favourite book that’s getting a pasting: what seemed to the reviewer to be a careful and evidence-based summary of the book’s failing, seems to you to be an attack on your taste, your culture, and your personality. To criticize something you like is tantamount to criticizing you, and that’s personal, damn it!

It’s this reaction, I think, that explains why responses to bad reviews so often take the form of personal attacks on the reviewer. In fact, there’s such a standard playbook of responses, that you can play along at home:

Also posted at Dreamwidth, where there are comment count unavailable comment(s); comment here or there.

Just to check: are we agreed, then, that the only problem with claims like "George Eliot uses the plight of Dorothea to highlight the inequality of women" is the misleading shorthand? Or is there still a bullet you think I have to bite?

Well, that depends. If one thinks that the a book is intended to communicate a meaning or meanings by the person who wrote it, and that those meanings can be recovered, one can actually talk (however tentatively and conditionally) about the author's intent. There are many bullets that need to be bitten when one walks that harsh wobbly road beset by many a mixed metaphor. On the other hand, if one is just talking about a voice in the novel, without reference to any person in consensus reality, probably all one has to do is make that clear.