Odhanan said:
I'm sure classifications are useful as far as classifications are concerned. But I wasn't trying to justify or validate rounser's point, nor was I trying to contradict yours.
I was just thinking aloud, on another degree, about the nature of fantasy an how artificial categories and sub-categories within it in fact destroy its very purpose. These categories and sub-categories are artificial no matter where they are coming from, who came up with them and when.
They take away a sense of wonder sure, but that's not what genre classification is about, so it's hardly detrimental. Genre classification is about providing concise definitions for different works of entertainment. Point is, all classification are artifical but they're also
necessary. This is why, despite the fact that many of them hate genre classification, professional authors and publishing houses continue to work within its established boundaries.
If, one day, knowing where to group books in the libraries, book stores, catalogues, and archives of the world and conveying these locations to others suddenly didn't matter a whit, then sure - there would be no problem with doing as rounser has done. Choosing to ignore the long-standing system of classification, making up a new one based upon whatever a given indiviudal finds appealing, wouldn't cause any problems. In our world, of course, this would cause a massive communitcations breakdown (as have rounser's posts on this thread and Warlor'ds on the other).
Recall the Monty Python 'bookstore' sketch - same deal. A guy comes in and asks for a bunch of books by authors who don't exist, because he's misspelling their names. Imagine, if you will, rounser going into a bookstore and asking for a fantasy novel - the clerk would, unless he knew rounser's own personal tatses by heart, have no clue what rounser was asking for. Instead, the clerk would hand him a book filed under the commonly accepted definition of the word fantasy. In a world without genre clasification, the clerk might have his own ideas about what constitutes "fantasy" and, for all rounser knows, the clerk's idea of "fantasy" may only include Gorean bondage novels.
We have classification systems for a reason - they provide a standardized method of identification and subsequent context for discussing certain subjects. Those who deviate from the standard have no expectation to be understood or taken seriously. They're making up their own language and only they know it - to everybody else, it's complete gibberish. I agree that that the current system of genre classification is flawed, but it's also necessary until something better comes along (and a non-system of personal definitions and nonsense words is
not better).