Rosalie Fitzpatrick on fiction and cooking without allergens: writing, editing, best of lists, reading recommendations, books, mangas, movies, TV shows, comics, quotes and recipes. All recipes focus on allergen free cooking suitable for endometriosis and pregnancy: wheat, egg, cow's milk, rye, oats, soy, almonds, peanuts, red meat and gluten free. Also, most are seafood, alcohol, yeast and nut free. All other allergen exclusions vary per recipe.
Showing posts with label Copyright. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Copyright. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Is there are war on creativity and the arts?
This is written solely from my personal perspective, which has some experience in some fields and just hearsay in others. I'd love to hear what others think on this topic too so pitch in. What concerns me is that everywhere I look the arts seem to be running into hard times despite the population increasing and art being produced on a wider scale than ever. Only the world of comics seems to be doing well enough right now, what with movie deals expanding the audience further and copyright still be fairly firmly in the right hands and enforced. Mind you, they're only just coming into play on the Internet so I don't know how long that will last. I'll get back to you on their field if they should go the way of the book industry. Which is always a possibility.
Fine arts, a.k.a painting and sculpture etc. has become less and less appreciated by the masses while printed photos, either on canvas or off, has become more popular. And I'm not talking about arty photos taken for a single purpose by the one to have it printed, I mean mass produced nothings of things like twigs in various colours. Even printed family portraits would pass as vaguely uninspired but worthwhile. The most appreciation most artists get for their works is a hanging in a show, a very slim chance at a sale (very, very slim), and possibly enough people walking through a showing and appreciating the work to have a known name in a certain area. Whether or not gaining a name leads to more sales is another thing. It seems that the masses still have this idea that art is mostly to be found in glitzy galleries, doesn't make sense and that all artists are pretty well off due to exorbitant pricing. The reverse is reality. Most artists feature in small galleries or nowhere, their art is easily understood and appreciated (although those 200 word descriptions are still demanded by gallery owners when artists just want to write it in one sentence, such as "scene of the back pasture at morning" or "man/woman crying"), and their pricing barely covers the cost of materials and framing.
What's causing these artists to struggle? The large retailers offering cheap and nasty prints and the lagging and outdated social concept that artists all have it the way a few did in the eighties. Even the Tax office management thought there was money to be gleaned in taxes from artists and insisted all artists fill in tax forms. On finding out most came in at a loss they gave up on such a foolish idea. It is laughable really but on seeing mass produced prints with frames worth hundreds and the print worth $2 in houses and offices all over I just feel like crying for the whole fine arts scene. Artists are losing out on sales and recognition for ignorance, disinterest in individuality and quick sales.
As you can tell from all of the above, photography is also being undermined by the mass produced prints now sold by the big retailers. For an individual piece, one not to be found anywhere else, you will have to fork out for the artist's time and materials plus a little profit. This does mean a higher price but uniqueness is assured and the photographer's income along with it. For those who produced the mass produced prints, there might be a few dollars to be had but most aren't produced by a single artist creating art but rather someone within a company taking a photo and having the product so digitally enhanced it has little relation to the original work. The artists who do find their works printed have usually already taken some of the most famous photos of our era and do receive some money for their work. Said artists though, are few and very far in between. They are also often employed by or work with newspapers, where they make the bulk of their earnings taking shots of celebs, events and disasters. Photography for photography's sake? Has anyone heard of this being bought and sold en masse anymore? Not really. You have to be in the field to find the clues as to how to be successful and while in the field you see thousands of others producing great works that highlight colour, space, shape, texture, emotions, lines. The competition for recognition is extremely high but recognition doesn't necessarily lead to monetary reward anymore. Although, it might help with getting you a newspaper contract so you can make a living taking less thought out photos of events, disasters and of course, celebs. The best of the best then do take the time to try to infuse a focus on colour, space, shape, texture, emotions and lines into their work, creating those famous photos and securing a little extra pay through the mass production of their work. Why all this struggle on the part of the photographer? Instant, thoughtless gratification on the part of the consumer, a disregard for individuality and personal appreciation and the ever present shadow of big retailers and cheap mass production.
Music artists are having a tough time of it too. You're probably thinking "not really" or some such with a mind to junk like Bieber or some other toy boy prince, girl power band or glittering in gold rapper. You'd be right in thinking they're bringing in the big bucks quite easily but even they have it rough compared to before. Individuality and creativity do not exist in such fields of music and where it does exist the big bucks are nowhere to be seen. Most musicians nowadays have to walk not only the tightrope of creativity vs earning money but also copyright vs mass reach. To keep one's copyright is to stay small and earn little, which does allow for creative freedom as you're unlikely to get a contract. To have your copyright infringed by all and sundry is to earn more (though not at all what you should be earning) and reach millions but to have your creativity stripped from you for increased sales and an income propped up by product placement and advertising. All because the masses steal music like never before. Sure, music can be free as it is but airwaves free to the ears and files are just there but the masses continuing to take without paying does mean the entire music industry is facing a financial and creative crisis and all those pesky new programmes and restrictions are created to annoy the consumer who just wants to hit one button to play but has to go through more than necessary. The masses think they have rights to someone else's work but they don't really. Not until those rights are released by the creator. Unfortunately, most people don't see the creator as the one holding said rights but rather an enormous company that won't miss a few dollars anyway. Taking music for free is seen as stealing a single candy from a supermarket filled solely with candy rather than taking a giant slice of someone else's dinner. For those musicians not really deserving of the name as they're more puppets than anything else, dealing little in music and even having their product altered down to the base notes by machines, there seems little harm in stealing from them but consider this: if even these remaining "music stars" disappear the entire music industry as we currently know it will crumble apart. In this, I'm actually not sure if the result would be better or worse for musicians everywhere. Music would naturally have to become more local and creative, shifting back to something closer to what it was pre the music producer boom. But then, most of our collective knowledge about some really fantastic bands would disappear too. Of course, this isn't necessarily the way it would all turn out but I would say it is fairly inevitable that to continue to steal means to slowly destroy the very mass culture you're all wanting to follow by stealing. And along the way you'll destroy many a smaller band who's just making their break.
What's happening to music is fairly similar to what's happening to movies. If you're at the top then you can afford to produce movies still even though the costs are enormous and the amount of earnings lost seems to be forever growing. To combat lost earnings the movie makers produce what is believed to be desired by the masses, drawing in larger and larger audiences for single films. The upshot of reaching a wider audience per film though, is stripping out all the possibly objectionable aspects and making films less creative or revolutionary than ever. This is why we see the same old story lines over and over, the emphasis on booming soundtracks and flashy fight scenes over unique plots and unconventional characters etc. For the rest of the movie makers it is a struggle to gain funding, to find a wide enough audience or even to get a showing. Indie works have their time and place but they aren't seen often, bring smaller crowds and appear in very few cinemas. The DVDs to follow have to same pattern. The bigger the audience of the original show, the more prints are made in hope that a wide section of the population will want a copy. The smaller the original audience the less likely you are to find a print at all. And then there's things like, it was big enough to be shown in several countries but the estimated audience of a print only sees returns in the original country at best so sales are lost for a lack of subtitles being included or for few sales points. There are so many movies out there that the number would have your head spin. Movie production took of far faster than pretty much any other art form and yet, what can you find in most collections? The same as in everyone else's. The top sellers of the day and some childhood classics. Only the fanatical collectors have combed through enough of the backlog of movies and shows to find original prints or rare B-rated works. And many of these will sell for peanuts and have been damaged for lack of proper care. And I don't even want to consider the stashes held by governments and TV stations that remain locked away from the public for one reason or another but usually neglect. Movies are going the way of music for the same copyright issues, the same mass demands and the lack of appreciation for something completely different.
And finally books. This is home turf for many of those who come to my site. The world of books is in a mess and non of the authors, critics and publishers seem to know exactly where the industry is headed. Traditional publishing houses are clashing with the newer ebook publishers and big retailers. Indie publishers are losing out to big retailers and traditional publishers that merge. ebook publishers had a boom and are now competing with their own clients as authors begin epublishing on their own to save the costs of the publishing house. Who knows what mess the distributors are in but usually a publishing house is a distributor now so I guess it follows suit that they're in a bad way too. There's a high chance that an author will have to find an overseas publisher if the distributing publishing houses in their home country distribute more than print. The pool of authors seeking the more definite sales from a traditional publisher who's also into distribution is growing enormously, increasing the slush piles of said publishers. This means that more and more publishers are now shutting their doors to submissions. Well, this along with the fact that it is cheaper to distribute the same old hits than to print a new work and take a risk on a new author. Even critics are under fire from 'reviewers' who do little but write "this is crap" or "this is great" under a book on Amazon or such like. Critics have gotten to the point of saying you aren't a critic unless you analyse the work, and likely for a publisher. So where's the line between a critic and a blog reviewer who writes an essay on the book? The mire is large in the book world and it has been created by several factors: new technology, copyright infringement of said new technology, the increasing numbers of authors that is thanks in part to the author mystique and to writing classes and courses, the big retailers emphasising consumer responses and interaction and the price war created by different methods of publishing. Unique writing is being thrown in for formula and expected results from sticking to genre trends and certain writing styles. Big names are ever big while little and new names are drifting into the world of nevermore. There are some publishers looking to change this by seeking out niche markets and different writing but those are few and the competition is high. Indie publishers offer to print more unique works but their distribution is limited and sales as a result. There are probably more aspects to include but to be honest, considering the mess the book industry, my favourite arts industry, is in just makes me want to cry (Quick! Someone paint me!). All the problems of the book industry come down to the consumers wanting cheaper fad books all the time as many saw the possibility of such and began a wide demand for competitive pricing and the slower change of consumers giving up the reading of less popular works for other entertainment pursuits. Fashion, as driven by the less read consumer, has taken a hold of the book publishing industry and the hold is uncomfortably tight. In all, the traditional publishers, the distributors, the ebook publishers, the vanity publishers and the critics are all just responding to consumer trends. The sales that were once eroding solely for entertainment competition are now eroding for internal strife. Unfortunately, the authors are suffering for it and there are more of them than ever, creating a shark pool that's calm on the surface and bloody underneath. Calm for sharing information and bloody for the intense competitiveness that comes with securing a living.
So with all this, is there a war on creativity and the arts? Well, not officially. It is more that we the people have shot ourselves in the feet and the knees and are progressing upwards. In some ways you could say that big business is to blame for setting trends in the first place but they really just follow sales. If it wasn't for us buying the same old stuff as everyone else in the first place then insisting it be cheaper and possibly (in some cases make that probably) free then we'd not be facing such mindless waffle from out media, the same old mainstream books from the publishers, the horrendous proliferation of Bieberism and such like, all while going home to sit and ignore the prints seen in hundreds or thousands of other houses as they're only really there to fill in space and impress visitors. If we all wanted things to change into something more creative, accessible and varied then we'd better go back to paying our artists and being interested in new sights and thoughts and stories.
That's it for my ramble for today (I hope it made enough sense). I'm not one to draw a definite conclusion on all this as there isn't even one out there in the big wide world of the arts. We'll all see what happens as it does. But if I lose my books there will be hell to pay. Boredom doesn't suit me.
Labels:
Analysis,
Arts,
books,
Comics,
Consumerism,
Consumption,
Copyright,
Creativity,
Culture,
Entertainment Industry,
Fashion,
Fiction,
Films,
Fine Art,
Movies,
Painting,
Photography,
Publishing Industry,
Sales,
War
Saturday, May 5, 2012
On the pressure for original ideas in novel writing
As I concluded (well, started too) in my post "On ideas, originality and creativity" humanity doesn't come up with new, fresh or original ideas that are completely disconnected from any other idea out there. It is impossible.
And yet, in the creative field of writing there is an enormous pressure upon writers to come up with just that. The pressure comes from the public and from the industry itself. It is strong enough that even those starting out in writing or who want to feel the pressure to write on something that's never been written before. Failing to think of anything usually ends with a failure to write.
It is a utterly impossibility to come up with something completely new but the current state of our own propaganda, copyright system and our belief that "we can do anything" as long as we try makes many a beginner or aspiring writer believe they can and should do the impossible.
We can't. Don't even bother worrying over the fact that we can't. Just do what you can, solve what you can, work hard and you'll see benefits. That's what we humans excel at and what has brought humanity to this point (yes, some of you may be saying we should have done it all differently but that's hindsight and working with more knowledge than we had then. There is a certain number of us being pointedly blind and corrupt but this isn't to the point of everyone throughout our history has been).
Individual humans are like worker ants in a swarm. We learn what we learn and work within those principles alone while others learn something else and do something else. Separately we work on what we each believe important and join forces with some who share similar views. Altogether our achievements are in the masses and reach far beyond what any single person could ever do. This, we should be proud of. It is a rather efficient method of ensuring pretty much any possibility we know of gets explored somehow, often repeatedly for different variables, and our collective knowledge therefore expands with the results.
As you can see, I find Isaac Asimov's long distance views of humanity quite interesting to read.
So if we all work with separate little pieces of knowledge on life, the universe and everything and (as noted in "On ideas, originality and creativity") produce new or not so new blends of ideas we've separately encountered there will be many an overlap of ideas produced.
Everyone capable of writing knows about death, betrayal, love, war, hate, suicide etc etc. Everyone is concerned in some way or another with the young and the old, whether they are of these classes or not. Everyone has beliefs as to what happens after death though not everyone agrees as to what: nothing, something unimaginable, a strict structure or a reincarnation.
2001 Booker Longlist novels broken down by theme.
Can't read the main themes?
Death
Love
Betrayal
Corruption and Theft
War
Suicide
Running Away
Only one lighthearted topic there and it is probably tinged with betrayal.
Are you wracking your brain right now trying to think of something to prove me wrong? Don't bother.
Put simply, you can't. But like before, don't even bother worrying over the fact that you can't.
Originality, newness and uniqueness is never found in its pure form. Just as truth is never found in its pure form. You will never create it no matter how smart you think you are or how original you think your current work or idea is. Your idea, work and smartness do not revolve around complete, pure originality. It revolves around how you blend what you know together, how you write this blend down and on what you focus upon amongst the miriade themes, events and issues that appear in your work.
On the opposite end of the scale there is this old saying on monkeys and typewriters. "The infinite monkey theorem states that a monkey hitting keys at random on a typewriter keyboard for an infinite amount of time will almost surely type a given text, such as the complete works of William Shakespeare."
Probability may say so but I highly doubt it would ever happen because the probability is so incredibly small. Besides, why bother? We already have the original and making monkeys do it is about the only novelty there is in producing another copy. If you find monkey slavery amusing at all.
Authors, writers and prospectives shouldn't feel so under pressure to come up with original ideas that have never been broached before. The pressure of copyright is there so you don't act the monkey and type out Shakespeare's plays to claim for yourself. It isn't there to force you to come up with something completely unheard of before, despite the pressure you feel.
Write with the knowledge that you can pay hommage to others, especially if you reference them. Write with the knowledge that you are allowed to touch on subjects, themes and characters other people have created or written as long as you alter them enough through actions, encounters, personalities, placements etc to be your own versions. Or reference them.
Copyright is there so that you pay your dues to the one who developed or owns the little idea you're using without altering. And fair enough, even if this is a complete distortion of how humanity has worked with ideas before copyright. In this case copyright is mostly progression (some disadvantages are included) because it does force you not to mimic word for word, idea for idea, thus promoting heightened change and development.
In a world where we can only blend the ideas already floating about we shouldn't force ourselves to write beyond what is possible. As with every other field we should challenge the impossible, expand our views and discover as much as we can through reforming ideas, exploring the possibilities of new discoveries humanity has made and heightening our collective knowledge and understanding by writing on every theme possible, not just the few labelled in that diagram above.
Collectively, writers shed light on everything for everyone, through recording and reformatting information, so that we can all consume knowledge and then act as we believe we should. If there is anything to worry about in writing and publishing it isn't coming up with a completely new idea that's never been heard of before. It is on shedding light upon the most unlikeable, troubling, problematic and disturbing aspects of ourselves and our world and hoping it will be accepted by a publisher.
Luckily gritty reads are believed mostly palatable and acceptable because they challenge a reader and cause a stir. You'll only be rejected for works that cross popularly help beliefs on common decency as well as moral and ethical acceptability.
Friday, May 4, 2012
On ideas, originality and creativity
Have you noticed how often there's a proclamation or a new,
fresh, original or creative idea or concept and when you go to find out all
about it you’re disappointed to see it is either a rehashing of old ideas in a
new format or a blending together of themes already well known but the blend
just happens to be a little different?
By this time in my life, after hearing the terms new,
fresh, original and creative being thrown about for nearly every newly popular
book or fad out there I've come to expect to be disappointed. In fact, experimental
science is about the only thing I find worth getting excited about after
hearing those words. Today's example of exciting news was "Eye microchip
gives sight to blind".
Now that is as new, fresh, original and
creative as we get. Which is pretty good as far as I'm concerned, even if
the discoveries were based on years of research, bandied ideas from multiple
scientists and thinkers and a collective effort on the part of the IT industry
to come up with the chips in the first place. As you can see, the originality
is all in the application and the ability to connect the dots.
For a while I pondered why there weren't any truly new ideas
about, ones that are completely disconnected from anything that has come
before. A few years back I came to the conclusion that we don't have new ideas,
just blending of old ones in new ways. Sometimes in incredibly outstanding ways
and sometimes in incredibly idiotic ways.
Many I conveyed this thought to didn’t accept this idea of
mine as most like to think they can come up with new ideas, particularly in the
age of copyright. But I think the arguments just came down to the definition of
a new idea. They thought that if no one had done it just like they had then it
was a new idea. I thought that if you’d used multiple old ideas and concepts to
create your new idea then it wasn’t really new, just a new or different blend
(one others have possibly had too).
Instead of new ideas, completely disconnected new ideas,
what we have is like an endless building process. Over the course of our
existence as a species, humanity has gathered data on the planet, ourselves,
our fellow inhabitants of the planet and the universe. It is even possible that
the data collection may have even started before we could be labelled truly Homo
sapiens. The amount of information we have collected is beyond extraordinary.
To the point were it is now absolutely impossible for one single human to hold
and remember all the information at once, let alone access it all in their
lifetime. We have truly amassed a sea of data.
So what a person holds in their mind is the knowledge passed
down to them (sometimes correct and sometimes erroneous) and the information
they've searched out for themselves. They do not and cannot hold information in
their minds that they've never encountered before in any way, shape or form. Not
even a hint. Otherwise we'd be psychic of a sort. Or fore-thinkers. I really
don't know the category or extra-human you'd like to class such a type of human
as so suffice it to say we'd be other than bog-standard Homo sapiens at that
point.
Instead of trying to come up with information we've never
encountered before we in fact have a better solution for data gathering and
application than any encountered in the animal kingdom, although many animals
will have a similar ability to part of ours. We have two things. We have
synapses that fire scattered and uncontrolled impulses along with controlled
ones. And we have the ability to record our thoughts, writing, crafts and art
being the first forms of this recording.
Our synapses are constantly firing, zapping each other over
and over or disregarding each other to fire at others instead. The weaving
patterns of emphasis and disregard create memories and forgetfulness. If
particular synapses don't fire then they become dormant, as you read in that
article about lost coloured dreams suddenly returning after years of darkness.
The unused are sometimes overwritten for use by another skill you find more
important. So you forget one thing and remember another (thus you can't
remember your old maths solutions but can remember how to go through the stages
of cooking a BBQ). The used connections become stronger and more permanent. But
even in their use they change, much the same as an over-trodden path in the
woods does through the years. So you memories change over time, and truth is
lost almost immediately (don’t go hunting for absolute truth – it will drive
you mad.)
With all the firing, misfiring, ignoring and whatnot come
your memories, movements, sensations, thoughts and consciousness. But there is
also something else happening. There is a lot of "static" going on,
particularly in the misfiring, that can link thoughts, memories, movements and
sensations together to change your conscious awareness of any particular thing.
And this static and misfiring happen all the time. A simple test is the old
tongue twister. After a very short time you simply can't say what you wanted to
say and start saying complete gobbledegook.
Maybe even gobbledegook, a new way of iterating sounds,
could be used as words if given a meaning. And those words built into a
language. People do this all the time too, for example: "Oh, I'm sorry,
sir. I'm anispeptic, frasmotic, even compunctuous to have caused you such
pericombobulation." – Blackadder.
Your brain just keeps making connections over and over,
through misfiring and static, mistakes or intentions, discoveries and new
information gathered. And anything newly added to your memories becomes fodder
for another odd blending of ideas that comes from your brain doing something
that seems quite impractical from the outset but is in fact one of the most
practical and magnificent things about the brain at all.
The other thing that humans do, that which no other in the
animal kingdom does, is record what knowledge we've gathered. We don't just
pass on our discoveries through "monkey see, monkey do" anymore, we
write it down and store it for anyone (mostly) to see and use. And we've been
doing this for thousands of years. There is too much to handle for any single
person. Ever. But that doesn't mean any particular person couldn't go a
research any particular subject, blend it with whatever else they know and
apply it in a new way. They could and do.
The upshot of all this is that humans are constantly coming
up with combinations of ideas and developments that astound us. No single human
could think of them all so most are amazed when anyone comes up with one,
particularly so when that person comes up with one that benefits so many and
seems so simple an idea but is so complicated and requiring extreme skill to
develop.
Humanity doesn't come up with new, fresh or original ideas.
It never has. The advertising that we do is false and the self-congratulations
we give ourselves are attributed to the wrong skill. Humanity instead has this
gorgeous mind that constantly blends and mixes data in creative ways to come up
with solutions to problems and answers to questions through experimentation. It
is our problem solving skills and our ability to actively search for
answers that should be acknowledged. That and our ability to write and
communicate.
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