Thursday, November 13, 2014
Blog #5 Non-Fiction Thoughts
I think that genres are good for readers to find
things that interest them. So we need genres as interested readers. People want
to know what kind of book they are going to be reading so they look up the
genre. If people are about to read a non-fiction book then they have every
right to believe they will read exactly what happened it, 100% facts. That’s
not always the case though. Some non-fiction books are all factual and exactly
what happened. Other times, they aren’t. Authors might use a story and bend it
a little bit to make for a better story that readers will enjoy more. If they
do this then it simply shouldn’t be labeled a non-fiction book. If the author
changes very small details like the cat’s name in a random scene then I think
that is alright. So, if the author changes things that impact the outcome of
the book, it’s not non-fiction. If the things that are changed are unnoticeable
and have no effect on the outcome then it’s still fine to be labeled a
non-fiction book. I have a problem with this though. If we aren’t educated in
the non-fiction book we are reading and it is not factual then we are placing
lies in our brain. There is no way to know if what you are reading is a lie or
not. I think the precise percentage to still be labeled a non-fiction book is
90-10 Facts-Lies. David is wrong because of my examples above. You never know
when the smallest lie will impact somebody as a reader or a viewer to what is
supposed to be a non-fiction movie. Label it Fiction if there is lie
after lie. Or simply say based on a true story and have that settle everything.
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I didn't address this in my argument but I think it is a good point to make. If we take away genre labels for literature, how can readers find books that meet their standards or preference. No labels means no way of defining or finding books in a convenient and operable way.
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