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Saturday, May 26th, 2007 05:23 pm
For those on my flist not able to join [livejournal.com profile] oursin and [livejournal.com profile] brisingamen at Wiscon, or who did not go and have fun at Kalamazoo (or even those who did!) but who would like to participate in a Con panel, there is lively discussion at [livejournal.com profile] papersky, [livejournal.com profile] sartorias and [livejournal.com profile] katenepveu and others coordinated in the community [livejournal.com profile] bittercon. Here's my panel topic:

"I'm So Special" - Wish Fulfillment Fantasy and Science Fiction

From Harry Potter to Heroes, there's a whole sub-genre of SF in which the "outsider" suddenly discovers that he or she is not an outsider but a member of some elite class of beings (wizard, superhero, Herald). There is a sub-genre of this trope in which the person becomes special by being CHOSEN by some kind of sentient animal - think particularly of the works of Mercedes Lackey and Anne McCaffrey.

My question is not so much about the popularity of such a class of novels - I think the attraction is fairly obvious - but whether any of these authors, or others, have dealt with the notion of being the one NOT chosen. J K Rowling never really allows her characters to interact with "normal" Muggles, only the dreadful members of Harry's family - I'd love to read something from the perspective of such a character. There are several Pern novels in which some of the suspense is derived from the viewpoint character not being chosen by a dragon when expected to be so, but I believe that all of them end up with that character being chosen in the end.

I've often thought of writing something called "The Unchosen" from the perspective of someone in that position who feels, perhaps, bitter (hey - Bittercon!) and excluded. Do any works exist in which the main character is "normal" within a society such as I've described and comes to terms with it?

A related question is that these, with the possible exception of Harry Potter, seem to fall into the category of "guilty pleasure" reading - basically not terribly good books that are nevertheless fun escapism. Are there any "good" works, by which I mean books that you don't have to apologize for reading, that fall under this category? And if not, why not?
Monday, May 28th, 2007 05:58 am (UTC)
she eventually comes to the realisation that, no, she really isn't the Chosen One and would be much happier if she went back home and made friends and generally tried to be a reasonable human being. This is depicted as the hard-won result of painful personal growth and absolutely a victory for her.
In a context I can't really talk about for reasons that would make sense if I could go into detail I can't, I have seen people in real life come to a strikingly analogous realisation. And what's interesting and relevant was that in this case, as in the anime you describe, it was very much a case of personal growth and was rather a personal victory. It didn't make anyone feel better because they thought they were, say, losing a fifth wheel; everyone was happy and congratulatory because one individual's particular truth had been found.

So linking to another previous commenter's thought, here's a case where you can spend a lot of time on that - and possibly on telling that story - and not have it be depressing at all. It certainly wasn't in this real-life example.