pegkerr: (I do not understand all this)
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I am still trying to come up with a proposal for Fantasy Matters.

Okay, for once I really am looking for advice. Amazing, Peg's actually asking for advice! I just have to get them 250 words of a proposal by Friday, something that looks half-baked enough that they might actually accept it.

Hearts of flesh and stone. Gee, I want to do something about this, because I've been chewing over it for so long, but right now whenever I attempt to corral my thoughts on this, they scatter unhelpfully in all directions like skittering mice, refusing to coalesce. Perhaps its the lingering effect of anaesthesia on the brain. I'd prefer to think it's that, rather than rank stupidity. However, whatever the cause, the problem remains the same: I need to come up with something!

Thinking about: The Snow Queen (the mirror cracks, a piece of glass lodges in Kay's heart, making it cold and frozen). I could re-visit A.S. Byatt's essay "Ice, Snow, Glass" in Mirror, Mirror on the Wall which I ran across while researching the ice palace book, and it really impressed me at the at time. But then I'm kinda pissed with A.S. Byatt at the moment (see "A.S. Byatt and the Goblet of Bile").

I've been thinking of my earlier essays on Heart of Flesh/Heart of Stone. I'm thinking about the afterward to Tam Lin, which started my whole obsession with this subject (although [livejournal.com profile] pameladean said the book was about the study of literature, and how that prevents the heart of stone, rather than about fantasy per se. But why did she choose a fantasy to tell the story? Other than the fact that, duh, she's a fantasy writer?) I've been thinking about George MacDonald's "The Light Princess," which is kinda getting at sort of the same stuff, sideways (using "gravity" and tears as the metaphor for the stamp of humanity, rather than the heart of flesh). Can people name other stories or tales which feature a heart of stone, or that explore this dichotomy? Esp. fantasy stories? Here is a pretty cool story that gets at what I'm struggling to articulate: "The Girl With the Heart of Stone." I've talked about seeing the theme in fiction in general (i.e., in Austen and Dickens) but what does fantasy in particular have to say about this theme?

Throw me a lifeline, anybody, help! Any thoughts that this sparks in you. I'll be ever so touchingly grateful.

Peg, hopefully

Thank you, Friendslist! You're the best! I knew you would come through!



I am now feeling much more confident.

Love and kisses,
Peg

(no subject)

Date: 2007-06-20 04:35 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tanaise.livejournal.com
There's Kelly Link's fabulous story, "Travels with the Snow Queen" which plays with and possibly breaks that general idea.

Because I've been thinking about a heartless story in general, I can also think of the tin man in Oz, and the Russian fairytale bad guys who tend to store their hearts outside of their bodies so that they're safe/can never be killed. (the story I'm working on has the man's heart kept safe by an ex-girlfriend who didn't want him to wander). There's a song on the latest Keane album, Crystal Ball that's also got the same theme. (and actually, considering the idea that the bad guys can *only* be killed by destroying their hearts, there's a lot of similarity to Vampires in general there as well.)

(no subject)

Date: 2007-06-20 01:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tanaise.livejournal.com
Oh, and howl's moving castle. Can't believe I forgot that one.

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