I was re-reading one of my favorite comfort reads – THE FAR COUNTRY – about Australia, set in the early 1950’s – and in part about a bleak UK, in throes of post-war socialism, rationing and, frankly, despair. The author – Neville Shute – plainly didn’t hold much hope of England pulling out of the nose-dive, particularly for the qualified and skilled. As we know, it did at least in part improve, although I think he’d be even more depressed about its present state.
One of the two main characters is, for want of a better word, a refugee – a Doctor, given a choice of his own country occupied by the USSR, or being a manual laborer in Australia… he chose the latter. I love the story, and it was no small part of the reason I came to Australia. But compared to attitudes and mores of today’s literature, it is very dated. The character, a refugee, is grateful for refuge, and feels he owes the refuge-country a great deal, and would be willing to go to war, for it. He feels a that he owes the country and its people, and he does his best to learn the local language and customs, to fit in with it. It would never find a Trad publisher now.
There are many other aspects that are very rooted in 1950 – attitudes, the characters all smoke. The role of women is largely domestic… etc. I still enjoy the story, I just know it is about 1950, just as a historical novel I expect to be correct for the time and attitudes of that time (a lot of readers do not. They’ve been brainwashed into yesterday’s heroes, living by the standards of their time being bad, so they want their historical to be modern attitudes from people from a different milieu. It irritates me no end).
That said, sf in particular suffers from ‘dating’ because the future is a lot closer to us than it was to the writers of 1960. Some their ‘futures’ are already our past, and I don’t have my flying car, and the sales of Soylent Green look less likely. Fantasy doesn’t date as easily because most of it quasi-historical anyway.
But what do you do to protect your stories from becoming dated rapidly (while you’re still around to care about the sales)?




Leave a reply to TXRed Cancel reply