sfsignal


News Feeds
Add to Google Entries
Add to Google Commments

Subscribe with FeedBurner
Search


« Tube Bits for 01/21/2008 | Home | EW Reviews SF/F »
« Tube Bits for 01/21/2008 | Home | EW Reviews SF/F »
A 1996 Interview with Samuel R. Delany

The Center for Book Culture has a 1996 interview with Samuel R. Delany.

Here's an excerpt that fits in with our recent Mind Meld posts:

SRD: I suppose the questions I dont like include: "What makes a good plot?" "What's your definition of SF?" "Where do you get your ideas?"

When an interviewer asks me such questions, I have to reconstruct why I don't believe there is such a thing as plot for the writer in the usual sense; or why SF belongs to a category of object, as do all written genres, for which it is impossible to find necessary and sufficient conditions (that is, it belongs to a category of' object that resists definition in the rigorous sense of the word); or that ideas are not things but--even the simplest of them--complex processes and as such don't "come from" any "place" but are rather process-responses to any number of complex situations. With such questions, many of the ideas I'm dealing with are counterintuitive. And counter-intuitive ideas can't be explained quickly to someone who doesn't have a firm handle on them already.

Share: | Posted by John on Monday January 21, 2008 - 12:20 AM | Category: Books | © 2008 SF Signal



Comments


Post a Comment









Remember personal info?



[Use a smiley: Add this smiley Add this smiley Add this smiley Add this smiley Add this smiley Add this smiley Add this smiley Add this smiley Add this smiley Add this smiley Add this smiley Add this smiley Add this smiley Add this smiley ]
[Use shortcuts: URL, BOLD or ITALICIZE ]