Paul Farquhar
Legend
Another meaningless distinction. A story is a story. The mass market novel is itself a relatively recent invention, itself around 200 years old.Not a novel. If you had been paying attention, we have been discussing novel form, not short story or oral tales or plays.
Academia, where people are paid to make stuff up. Sticking a label on something doesn't make the label true, no matter how many letters the labeller has after their name (I have ten after mine, so I know all about academia).Nope. It's called academia. I get that you don't like the genres, and that's fine. Lots of people don't. But, that doesn't change anything.
If you think 70 is close to 100 then I think you need to resit maths.Oh, and 1950 is getting pretty close on a century btw.
You are the one who excluded pulp fiction from being worthy of discussion, and snobbery is the only possible justification for that, especially as it relates to D&D.But, no, it's not snobbery.
Howard, a morality tale?!! I take it you have never read a Conan story!Look, it's fairly simple. On one end, which we'll call Fantasy, you have those works that everyone will agree are fantasy. Tolkien, Howard, J. K. Rowlings, that sort of thing. And, what do those works have in common? Well, often they are morality tales, and typically, the non-real part of the story (ie. magic) is used as a plot device. The hero needs to see the Medusa, so, he gets a magic shield. Find the Horcruxes Harry! That sort of thing.
They are all boring.On the other end of the spectrum, we have those works that everyone will agree are SF. Heinlein, Asimov, Herbert, for the golden age stuff, Stephen Baxter, Robert Reed, James Corey (The Expanse), and others. ((Ok, I admit, I read a LOT more SF than fantasy, so, my list is a bit biased)) What do these have in common?
The quality of Science Fiction is measured by the number of exploding planets.