I would argue that this is what the concept of cultural appropriation does and why it is such a flawed idea.
Right. So, you think we are already good at respecting the creative forces of minority cultures, then?
I would argue that this is what the concept of cultural appropriation does and why it is such a flawed idea.
A person like this who enters into the markeplace of art, and is actually successful enough for their intellectual borrowing to be noticed, but doesn't understand that you can't just take any old snippets, phrasings, themes, or styles that you want without issue? A person who gets into the marketplace of ideas, but doesn't have any concept of ownership of ideas?
Right. So, you think we are already good at respecting the creative forces of minority cultures, then?
Does this person actually exist? Because, if they don't, it is a hypothetical that distracts us from the real issue. And... such hypotheticals are really quite common in online argument today.
I would argue that this is what the concept of cultural appropriation does and why it is such a flawed idea.
This is not unique to cultural appropriation. It's common to just about anything wielded by some whose zeal isn't leavened by experience with nuance. You see it everywhere, particularly with recent converts to religion, diets, analytical frameworks, and political ideologies.
Good post.
Even aside from issues of cultural appropriation--although related to it, if in a more general sense--there's the concern every artist has, in whatever genre or medium, which is: "Has this been done before?" For example, if you're a budding science fiction writer and you have this great idea that you're certain no one has ever thunked before, chances are you're wrong - or at least that someone has thought of and probably published a very similar idea.
This is why I feel that originality has more to do with authenticity than it does novelty. A new author should be more concerned with being true to their own voice, their own vision, than they should with making sure that everything they write hasn't been done before in any shape or form. Of course being well-read in the genre, or at least spending hours and hours browsing The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction helps a good deal. While I'm loathe to suggest any rules or "Thou Shalts" to creative practices, I do think being a student of whatever form you're engaging in is a very good idea. And a true student is a lifelong learner.
Of course this does relate to cultural appropriation in that just as a new science fiction author is well-served by educating themselves in the genre, so too might it be a good idea for someone incorporating cultural ideas into their project to have a sense of that culture and any issues that may exist, and to be respectful of those issues. But if a person wants to entirely avoid any inkling of "cultural appropriation," then the end result is writing from one's own experience - as this article posits - which ends up greatly limiting, if not outright killing, creative imagination. To quote:
"But it’s not just writers who ought to be worried. The logical apogee of a prohibition on cultural intercourse is a future in which each person is allowed to document only his or her precise subjective experience. A future, in other words, where fiction is history. And that sounds like a very dreary prospect for us all."
just as a new science fiction author is well-served by educating themselves in the genre
Why's that?
Except the concept itself kind of demands perfect. I think there is something religious about it.