DuckRabbit
Well-Known Member
I have put that Toby Young book on my list, thanks!
Everyone has need of juggling the flood of information, but I also think it is also a lot of people not trusting their own taste, and that constant need to flow with the crowd. I am at the point where I stand in line at the grocery store and know the faces on the front of the National Enquirer, but not US and People and so forth. I am that much out of the gossip/celebrity loop.
Fortunately, there isn't one system any more. I'm no longer plugging in to the mainstream. I am one of many others who hang around Goodreads to find new writers, instead of the latest literary sparkler. I have online friends with similar tastes who keep up with shared interests, and I have online movies and rarer, TV shows, that are brought to me on the Internet if I am patient. This works for me, because I have no desire to be trendy or seem to be more hip than I am.
I wrote a book about cats and couldn't get anyone to even ask to read it: because I am not a celebrity. The alternate path was previously to schmooze my way into making personal contacts (funnily enough, this is how Yeats made a name for himself) but that's no longer necessary. I started a blog, it became popular, and now when I bring out the book, myself, I will have an audience.
We are at the thin edge of the wedge that is going to splinter that former cement wall. There's going to be too many good things for people to enjoy. They will not put up with letting some edifice somewhere decide what they will like.
Which is great.
I think that's how conventions get overturned all the time in society and culture: a rejected group breaks away and forms their own independent group. Esoteric doctrine has it that it takes a society some 80 years to accept a new idea - just long enough for its initiator to live and die and never see his/her idea or creation accepted! An example is the impressionist painters who broke every rule of the French Academy of Fine Arts. The Academy assumed that the purpose of art was to teach moral lessons through historic, mythological, and Biblical themes whereas the impressionists were interested in painting their immediate environment, and modern urban and country life. In April 1874 they defied the official Paris Salon by setting up their own independent exhibition. In 1910 art critic Roger Fry brought an impressionist exhibition to England. They were still vilified and ostracised by the establishment. I think the problem is that many of the gatekeepers are NT. You do something different from the establishment at your peril, but eventually the new becomes the new convention. As you say, at least there are more options today - what with the internet and self-publishing.
Wonderful that you wrote a book on cats - I think I saw a post on that elsewhere on this forum. I am a cat-lover with 2 rescue cats - the new one not accepting the old one - and would love to read your blog. Would that be possible or is that private?