Sep. 7th, 2012

attackfish: Yshre girl wearing a kippah, text "Attackfish" (Default)
Faith -- or even the considered rejection of faith -- is an area often overlooked in world-building for speculative fiction in spite of the impact it's had on our world (for good and bad). How does faith affect the world view and formation of a fictional world?

The first thing you find out about writing a novel is that you know the way you thought you had everything planned out?  Not so much.  the world that feels so detailed and vivid in your head is full of holes.  As you start writing, a few thousand facets of your world get filled in and polished, and these things you didn’t think about before become important enough to ride around in the back of your mind all the time.  For me, the consequence to this is that I keep finding potential [livejournal.com profile] bittercon  panel ideas and saying to myself, yes, I have to write this post, because I’m doing things with this in the Novel.  Bear with me.

In my novel, the main character is deeply religious.  Her religiosity is important, though never central, to the story both politically, because she belongs to a faith that is a somewhat oppressed minority in the country she’s just beginning to rule, but she comes from a nation of people who had only just recently conquered the country she rules, and in that nation, her religion is the dominant group, and also emotionally, to her as a character.  Her beliefs also don’t line up perfectly with the standard doctrine of her faith.  She’s no radical heretic, but like may of us, she’s a little heterodox.  Other characters in the story have their own religious perspectives, either as fervent believers, or as people whose belief is a small part of their lives, or as people who just haven’t thought much about it (actual disbelief being much more difficult in a pre scientific revolution society).  And as I’ve been writing, and comparing other books to mine, I’ve noticed that all of those things I just mentioned are rare in the genre.

Which isn’t to say that religion is thin on the ground in the genre, not at all.  An author’s religious beliefs, or passionate lack of belief, and a wish to  inspire others to share those beliefs has even been the foundation of some of Speculative Fiction’s most popular works.  C. S. Lewis’s Chronicles of Narnia and Phillip Pullman’s The Golden Compass series are allegories for Christianity, and against religion entirely, respectively.

Gods and Goddesses frequently populate fantasy worlds, real, substantial, and willing to grant their followers power.  Fantasy reflects its connections to mythology in this way.  Mythologies, by their very nature have divine forces acting on the world.  The followers of these gods and goddesses have ample proof of their existence, which changes the importance of belief, and makes the gods, for the purposes of the story, another form of functional magic.

In Science Fiction settings, there is a tendency for religion to have fallen by the wayside as science has progressed further.  A character in such a setting need never consider a rejection of faith, because society has already done that for him.  A lack of a religious belief is as taken for granted as belief in the local gods was in early societies.  Or religion doesn’t show up at all.  It is just absent all consideration.

The most perplexing treatment religion in Speculative Fiction can receive, at least to me, is the one most often found in Urban Fantasy.  The traditional remedies against vampires, and many other evil monsters are religious in origin, and in stories where religion is not otherwise even mentioned, those remedies show up, crosses and holy water for vampires, baptism for fairies, hallowed ground for the risen dead, can all be invoked against the supernatural without anyone seeing this as evidence for Christianity.  Characters in on the hunting, even using these symbols may themselves belong to other religions, and no one seems to see a conflict.  Even when other gods appear, no one notices a contradiction.

Religion in Speculative Fiction is dealt with in many, many ways, but strangely, enough, just as religion, as an expression of culture and unprovable belief.  This is what I’m trying to do, in my novel, and the lack of it in the rest of the genre makes me wonder if I’m just the one odd duck who likes that kind of thing, and if I should scrap it.  And this lack makes me wonder, and not just because of my perpetual case of authorial insecurity, why?

What do you think of religion in Speculative Fiction?  Any specific examples you like?  Dislike?  Think it shouldn’t be in the genre at all?  Think it should be in the genre more?  Do tell.

Written for [livejournal.com profile] bittercon the online convention for those of us who can't make it to any other kind, on a topic adapted from a panel at the 2012 Chicon, the text of which is quoted at the beginning of this post.

Profile

attackfish: Yshre girl wearing a kippah, text "Attackfish" (Default)
attackfish

July 2022

S M T W T F S
     12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
2425262728 2930
31      

Avatar: the Last Airbender

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 8th, 2025 01:25 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios