Best history & criticism fantasy books according to redditors

We found 6 Reddit comments discussing the best history & criticism fantasy books. We ranked the 5 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about History & Criticism Fantasy:

u/SimplyTheWorsted · 14 pointsr/AskLiteraryStudies

Kathryn Hume uses the term "mimesis" as an opposite to fantasy (although she does so in a context of arguing that no literature could occupy either pure mimesis or pure fantasy, and that every text therefore falls on a spectrum between the two - in this book )

So...mimetic?

u/davidreiss666 · 6 pointsr/SubredditDrama

It's from one of the essay's in Asimov's Galaxy. I sort of doubt it's in print anymore, but with Asimov sometimes they still are.

u/sharilynj · 3 pointsr/TwoXChromosomes

That's an excellent question, and I'm not just saying that because I asked the exact same thing upfront. =)

Obligatory "I am not a lawyer," but I'll do my best to explain. (And a warning I use "we" throughout because I have co-author).

Everything I initially read about the Harry Potter Lexicon case (Warner Bros. and J. K. Rowling v. RDR Books) seemed like it was gonna be bad news for us. Guy ran a fansite for ages which was essentially a dictionary of all the terms and characters in the Harry Potter universe. Rowling was fine with the website and was actually a fan of it, until the guy wanted to put it into book form. She took him to court for copyright and trademark infringement, and won.

Now, you'd think, like I did, that it was simply because he used the Harry Potter brand to make and sell something without her permission.

But it wasn't about that at all. It was the fact that his book's content was simply a regurgitation of her books, and he wrote it in her voice -- using slight rewordings of her original language to "define" the words in the dictionary. He added nothing to it, really.

I actually ended up reading through the entire judge's decision in this case, and it's pretty fascinating.

One of the examples cited is....

>
> from Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix reads:
> For a moment it seemed suspended in midair, then it soared toward Ron,
> spinning as it came, and what looked like ribbons of moving images flew
> from it, unraveling like rolls of film.
>
> (Pl. Ex. 8 at 798.) The Lexicon entry reads in part:
> . . . When Summoned, the brains fly out of the tank, unspooling ribbons of
> thought like strips of film, which wrap themselves around the Summoner
> and cause quite a bit of damage (OP35). . . .
>

Like, geez... yeah, you definitely can't do that. You can directly quote to a degree, but you can't just reword someone else's content and sell it.

The judge in that case determined "the Lexicon’s rearrangement of Rowling’s fictional facts does not alter the protected expression such that the Lexicon ceases to be substantially similar to the original works."

Applying that idea to our book... Had we written a book from the perspective of a member of the (semi) fictional "Colbert Nation," that would have elevated our risk in that direction (though not to that degree). Like, talking about Stephen as a true hero who brings his Nation the truth every night, via these insightful segments. (Which I think we can agree would be a terrible book.)

But our book isn't that. It's from the perspective of the real-life outsider looking in, always framing the show as satirical and clearly stating the difference between the character and the performer. Plus, there's a significant amount of information included that isn't taken from the show's content.

It's all an issue of "fair use." Which is never clear-cut, it's just a sliding scale of risk that only a judge can truly decide. But we're confident the book's content meets the criteria. Another confusing aside: in Canada, where I and my business are located, we have a thing call "fair dealing" which is similar but different, and not one case like this has ever gone to court since the law was put in place, so there are no benchmarks established here.

The frustrating thing is, no lawyer would ever say "yup, you're good to go, what you're doing is totally legal." Which is what I wanted to hear. All a lawyer will ever do is tell you what your level of risk is. Once I understood that, I was much happier.

But yeah, it was a long process to understand why books like these were fine to sell...

http://www.amazon.com/Unofficial-Harry-Potter-Spellbook-Chooses-ebook/dp/B00FEQOJPC
http://www.amazon.com/Fiction-Folklore-Harry-Potters-World/dp/1571744401
http://www.amazon.com/Magical-Worlds-Harry-Potter-revised/dp/0425223183


...but the Lexicon wasn't.


All that aside, at the end of the day, Colbert is not litigious. There are already unauthorized bios about him out there, along with lots of stuff that isn't legal and uses his image commercially. Colbert's brother is actually a very well-known intellectual property lawyer, so he could've had all that and more shut down with one phone call ages ago.

u/akidneythief · 2 pointsr/Fantasy

Fitzpatrick's War by Theodore Judson

u/[deleted] · 2 pointsr/printSF

His Science Fiction of the 20th Century: An Illustrated History is a fantastic, heavily illustrated history of SF.