...Stephen King.
...Stephen King.
He helped invent an entire genre of literature, basically. That sounds the short of it.
He really didn’t cool it down in later years, or recant; he just stopped being as upfront about it. Read some of his personal letters and it still shines through.
Some people are afraid of clowns.
I’ve reading reading so much Deleuze that I’ve apparently turned off the part of my brain that check whether I’m using either word right lmao
ok
ok
No one is saying that his books or the books of any other problematic dead white man/author need to be burned and ignored. A lot of people are the products of their times and circumstances—though, I’m sure you know that saying Lovecraft was just that is fairly reductive of like decades of scholarship on the man.
This is a pretty good overview someone else linked in a comment not replying to you
to be fair: he was constantly in communication with authors and other intellectuals that thought his more racist views were seriously out there, and finding out he was not 100% of Aryan descent might’ve been the almost-psychotic break he needed to start being less racist...since, y’know.
1) Stop begging the question about racism-at-large or “does this problematic thing I enjoy make me problematic” because that ain’t what we’re talking about and you know it.
The correct response.
I guess I’m approaching it more from the viewpoint of being a creator / writer, in that regard. I think the average fan might not need to know or contend with Lovecraft’s racism if they’re just looking to consume “something scary,”—but really understanding Lovecraftian Horror, for me, requires that you also grapple…
Try reading The Horror at Red Hook for probably the most obvious racism you’ll ever see in anything fictional short of a KKK handbook.
Excellent use of Atomic Robo.
Imagine playing a modern riff of Lovecraft, thinking the idea is pretty cool, then going on to read almost any of his writing. Like, close your eyes and throw a dart at a board picking what to read.
Yeah, he belonged to a very small subsection of anglophile racists that even your average racist found insufferable and weird—so, that’s saying something about how bad his views were.
And this right here is why we need to continue having discussions about Lovecraft and his role in pop culture + literary history.