(Continuing this week's emergent theme of me against popular culture.)
There are lots of "great"
movies I've never seen:
Lawrence of Arabia,
Metropolis (the 1927 movie) or
Goodfellas, for example. Similarly, there are lots of "great"
books I've never read:
War and Peace,
Slaughter House 5 or
The Catcher in the Rye, for more examples.
Does this make me culturally ignorant? Possibly. But there are a few arguments I'd like to make:
Argument from popularity: just because a lot of people believe something, doesn't make that something true. So lots of people liked
The Great Gatsby (another one I haven't read), does that make this book good or just show that people have defective tastes?
Only the known can be good: Now, I read a lot of
Doctor Who novels (*shock*, no, really?). Fine, I doubt they'll ever make the top 100 classic novels of all time, but... I can't judge that. And the people who are the ones who would judge that (and why should we listen to them? - argument from authority) probably will never read a
Doctor Who novel, so these books so unjudged. Maybe
Camera Obscura is the highest example of literature ever, but so many people will never know because it's just a Doctor Who novel.
I may not read what literature classes are based on, nor watch films that are taught as the best examples of all time, but I enjoy what I do read and watch. Maybe I would like that other stuff, and maybe that will raise my "cultural recognition", but I've got enough to be going on with in the areas I am interested in.
(Okay, not entirely sure of what point I'm making, but whatever it is, consider it made, unless I wasn't making any point at all.)
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