Another one from that 'Neal Asher Gets Rabid' series. Sorry to say this was during my first encounters with the SFF world outside of enjoying reading books and attempting to write them. Not far off twenty years ago now.
It is human nature to strive to be, or to be perceived
as, superior to your fellow. This striving stems from the simple imperative
that if there’s someone higher up the ladder than you, then there’s still
someone who can step on your fingers, or shit on you. It is the same quest for
superiority that forms hierarchies in any organisation, group, or loose
alliance. And it is the one that has created the ‘liter-arty intelligentsia’
(those with pretentions to being intellectual heavy-weights) who seek to rule
the SFF world, and seem to think their pronouncements are holy writ. They also
create slavish followers trying to squash themselves into the same mould.
On the whole they are dreadfully serious – humour is
alien to them. In conversation they will often smear popular culture. If
everyone likes Friends, then they don’t and will give some apparently
worthy reason why. The plain silly they can own, and thereby score points:
“Well actually, my favourite program is the Magic Roundabout.” The points here
are for false frivolity, thereby demonstrating how though they are
intelligences to be reckoned with, they can still be fun. Even better if they
can attach some meaning that isn’t there: “It’s about arachnophobia and
patriarchal societies, you see.”
If a group is discussing a film, they’ll always find
a flaw to criticise, to demonstrate how observant they are and how so far above
the work in question. However, if something is judged as being worthy by other,
higher, members of the intelligentsia, they’ll hop on the same band wagon, for
to say otherwise in such a case might open them to criticism. Perhaps they have
not been bright enough to plumb the deep meaning of it all? You will find these
same people in the Tate Modern, attaching meaning and importance to what is
quite evidently crap to anyone with half a brain. Only the braver members of
their kind might voice a contrary opinion, usually those ones who still have
something functioning between their ears, and have yet to buy a life-time
membership.
Full members live to raise themselves in the regard
of others, but are caught in a fantasy of self-regard. The top ten reading
lists of same will always be for the sake of appearance and intellectual poseur
points. They will denigrate some of the old greats just to demonstrate how
independent is their thought. They’ll forget all about the lurid SF and fantasy
books that drew them into the genre, because they have of course outgrown such
trash. LeGuin and Delaney will be in and Dickson and Zelazny out. They’ll
definitely dislike Lord of the Rings, obviously – too many normal plebs like it
(and of course the same book has to be allegorical). In their lists will
be a smattering of books concerning subjects ending –ophy, ology, istry or ics,
and you can guarantee that none of them will be mathematics, physics, biology
or chemistry, or anything actually useful. And presently they’ll be wading
through a tome produced by some obscure European philosopher and foolishly
think that what insight they have is something new.
Equally, they will, when asked to list their top ten
favourite films, make their selection based on how they think this will enhance
their facade, not on what they actually like. Blade Runner would certainly be
allowable to them, but Terminator or Terminator II would definitely be out.
Battleship Potemkin is a definite, but Total Recall will cause them pain
(having its source as Philip K Dick but starring Arnold Schwarzenegger). Black
and white films would be in, the more obscure the better, and better still if
French, subtitled and deeply ‘intellectual’. In describing their selection
they’ll use the word ‘noir’ a lot, and sometimes lapse into ‘surreal’.
The defining spirit of these people is a total lack of
honesty. They are pretentious: truth is not their stock in trade, for if you
are truthful people might see you as you really are, and might be able to
assess your intelligence, judge you. Better to lie about your intellectual
gains, better to be obscure and misjudged as being deep. Better to appear to be
… better.
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