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Cult of the Written Word

By Lori Basiewicz

 

I was recently reading parts of The Short Oxford History of English Literature by Andrew Sanders. In the introduction, Sanders talks about the development of the secular canon and how it was based on the idea of the Catholic Church's canon of biblical literature. In the early days, as the canon was just coming into being, writers would try to prove their credentials by comparing themselves to writers of the past and holding the acknowledged literary sages up as idols to be worshipped and revered. Wordsworth saw himself as standing in an "apostolic line" with Chaucer, Spenser, and Milton.

 

There's something to be said about knowing what's been written before-- and having read it. That's how literature is lifted from dead archives into living conversation. Would Stephen King have as much to say without following Henry James, Edgar Allan Poe, Mary Shelley, Bram Stoker, H.P. Lovecraft, Shirley Jackson…? Sorting all that out and making note of it, using those prior works as context for your own, also gives your readers the code they need to read you most effectively.

 

In later years, as the Poets' Corner was gaining status in Great Britain as the location to venerate great English writers either by interring their remains there or else by erecting statues and plaques in their honor, this sense of worshipping the literary greats of the past spilled out of the literary world and into the common culture. The middle class began acquiring busts and statuettes to place in their reading rooms and on their mantlepieces to show that they belonged to an elite, learned culture.

 

As I was reading, it struck me that this tradition of placing writers on a pedestal continues even today. From inside the publishing world, this may not seem to be the case. Writers, whether aspiring or published, know that writing is far from a spiritual endeavor. It is filled with blood and tears and heartache and long, sleepless nights. Almost every writer I have ever encountered has at least one friend or family member who is less than supportive of her writer's dreams, who suggest that the individual is wasting her time, and think it would be more realistic for her to get a real job and forget this writing nonsense.

 

I read Sander's words, and I realized this lack of support is in fact evidence that writers are still worshipped and regarded with a certain degree of spiritual mystery. What the naysayers are in fact showing is a lack of spiritual faith that someone they know, someone who without a doubt is only a fallible mortal, might actually be able to attain the veneration due to true writers and be accorded the same honors as William Shakespeare, Charles Dickens, J.K. Rowling, and Stephen King.

 

Even within the publishing world, writers are encouraged to show their place in the apostolic line in the queries they send to perspective agents and publishers. Newer writers are instructed by today's sages to compare their manuscript to previously published novels. It's not that the newer writers are being told to suppress their own originality, but to reveal their place in the list of the literary divine so agents will know who might be willing to worship them.

 

Or at the very least to gamble a few bucks on a paperback by an unknown.

 

Lori A. Basiewicz has been sequestered in an undisclosed location. Her writing group says it is for her own good. While avoiding both her first novel and her Master's thesis, she co-launched Coyote Wild, a new speculative fiction ezine. Periodically she escapes protective custody in order to practice aikido. She can be reached at lori@coyotewildmag.com.

 

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