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Why I feel so abysmally let down by the "Ravnica" news...
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<blockquote data-quote="Cyber-Dave" data-source="post: 7469452" data-attributes="member: 82132"><p>Generally, I try (obviously failing as often as I succeed) and stay away from discussions about literary theory over the forums these days. It is too much like work for me. Once in a blue moon, however, someone makes a post which is intelligent but woefully inaccurate about some specific detail. With that in mind, you can take what I am about to say in that vein or ignore it, as you will: you woefully misunderstand the connotations and importance of the term "romantic movement," especially as it pertains to steampunk and cyberpunk. Romantic texts are not necessarily hopeful, full of openness, or wonder, nor do they necessarily celebrate technology. They can, in fact, do the exact opposite. There is a reason why the term "dark romanticism" had to be invented. Additionally, it is inaccurate to label steampunk as a romantic genre to the antithesis of cyberpunk. In fact, cyberpunk is famously described as being a new-wave of romanticism. In its early days, many critics used the term "neuromanticism" or "neuromantic" to describe the genre. That term was taken from Gibson's seminal text and the wide-ranging perception that cyberpunk was a form of "new romanticism." You should think of romanticism more in terms of its relation/attitude towards enlightenment era philosophy (generally negative, though a one word descriptor is reductive), its evaluation of emotion (generally positive), and its use of concepts such as the "sublime" (viewed as the highest aesthetic form).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cyber-Dave, post: 7469452, member: 82132"] Generally, I try (obviously failing as often as I succeed) and stay away from discussions about literary theory over the forums these days. It is too much like work for me. Once in a blue moon, however, someone makes a post which is intelligent but woefully inaccurate about some specific detail. With that in mind, you can take what I am about to say in that vein or ignore it, as you will: you woefully misunderstand the connotations and importance of the term "romantic movement," especially as it pertains to steampunk and cyberpunk. Romantic texts are not necessarily hopeful, full of openness, or wonder, nor do they necessarily celebrate technology. They can, in fact, do the exact opposite. There is a reason why the term "dark romanticism" had to be invented. Additionally, it is inaccurate to label steampunk as a romantic genre to the antithesis of cyberpunk. In fact, cyberpunk is famously described as being a new-wave of romanticism. In its early days, many critics used the term "neuromanticism" or "neuromantic" to describe the genre. That term was taken from Gibson's seminal text and the wide-ranging perception that cyberpunk was a form of "new romanticism." You should think of romanticism more in terms of its relation/attitude towards enlightenment era philosophy (generally negative, though a one word descriptor is reductive), its evaluation of emotion (generally positive), and its use of concepts such as the "sublime" (viewed as the highest aesthetic form). [/QUOTE]
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Why I feel so abysmally let down by the "Ravnica" news...
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