Thursday 3 September 2015

A History of Epic Fantasy - Part 6

The publication of The Lord of the Rings, and in particular the explosion of its popularity after 1965, did not result in an overnight transformation in the way fantasy was perceived and written. Indeed, the dominant form of fantasy throughout the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s remained sword and sorcery of the kind pioneered by Robert E. Howard.


Sword and sorcery and epic fantasy are distinct subgenres, although sharing some similarities (and both can be jointly referred to as secondary world fantasy). Sword and sorcery is seen as primarily action-driven, with violence and magic being dominant forces. Sword and sorcery books are generally shorter, and although often arranged in series there are perhaps less links between each book, with the focus more on stand-alone adventures. In the middle of the century sword and sorcery could also be quite weird, taking on board influences from science fiction as well as the fantastic.

Sword and sorcery had become the dominant form of fantastic fiction thanks to the likes of Howard and Leiber, and the work of other authors like L. Sprague de Camp and Lin Carter in popularising and expanding the genre. However, and perhaps surprisingly, it was this seemingly masculine subset of fantasy that brought in the first major female writers to the genre.

Starting in the 1930s, C.L. Moore wrote a number of short stories in both the science fiction and fantasy settings. Her works appeared in magazines such as Weird Tales and Astounding. Moore is notable for introducing one of fantasy's first heroines in the Jirel of Joiry series. In the following decade Leigh Brackett began writing numerous sword and sorcery-like stories, but set these on other planets like Mars and Venus, hence having them categorised as planetary romances (the same fate also befell male authors, most notably Edgar Rice Burroughs's Mars-set Barsoom series which arguably has more in common with swords and sorcery then science fiction).

In 1963 Andre Norton published Witch World, in which a man from our world is transported to a fantasy realm of warring factions. It is later revealed that people from other worlds and universes have been brought to this planet and the fantasy-like backdrop is melded with science fiction ideas. Norton wrote or co-wrote more than two dozen novels, novellas and short stories in this setting, and allowed other writers to use it as well. Witch World introduces the idea of having a fantasy world where only women can use magic, an idea later utilised by Robert Jordan in The Wheel of Time (unlike that series, men can also use magic safely and later learn to do so).


Male writers also continued to expand the remit of sword and sorcery and take it in unusual directions. In 1961, Michael Moorcock published The Dreaming City, which introduced readers to the character Elric of Melnibone. An albino riven by angst and introspection, Elric was deliberately designed as the antithesis of traditional heroes like Conan. The early Elric stories ended with the annihilation of Elric and his world; later books and novellas would fill in his backstory. Moorcock, who swiftly gained a reputation as the enfant terrible of science fiction for his introduction of the New Wave of the genre, enjoyed skewering holes in the perception of fantasy as well. In the 1970s he published controversial criticism of Tolkien (for his conservatism) and H.P. Lovecraft (for his racist viewpoints that spilled over into some of his fiction).

Rewinding a little to the same year that The Lord of the Rings was published, 1954, Poul Anderson released his seminal fantasy The Broken Sword, a gritty story of war, death and magic based on Viking mythology. Although relatively obscure today, writers from Moorcock to Richard Morgan have sung its praises as a demonstration of a darker, less comfortable form of fantasy to that written by Tolkien. Indeed, some have cited The Broken Sword as the forerunner of the so-called "grimdark" movement of fantasy that would eventually continue through Stephen Donaldson to more contemporary authors like Scott Bakker and Mark Lawrence.

In 1968 another author took a step into the ring to write a work that was neither Tolkienesque, nor sword and sorcery. Ursula K. LeGuin's novel A Wizard of Earthsea was set in a (mapped) fictional archipelago with a predominantly black cast of characters, a fact lost on the writers of the poor SyFy mini-series based on the books. The book inverted the fantasy stereotype of wizards being wise old men by asking where they came from and how they learned to do magic. This began the "magical academy" trope of fantasy fiction, which later found its ultimate form of popularity in the Harry Potter series (and echoes may also be detected in Susanna Clarke's Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell). A Wizard of Earthsea and its sequels are probably the closest we have to a "traditional" epic fantasy series between Tolkien and 1977, the year in which the modern genre really came into being.


In the same year, Anne McCaffrey published Dragonflight, the first novel in the Dragonriders of Pern series. Dragonflight is many respects an epic fantasy, but also a "rationalised fantasy", where the fantastic elements are explained by a science fictional background. The Pern series, despite its nominal SF background, would go on to influence many future fantasy novels, particularly with its depiction of dragons as allies and mounts rather than simple monsters.

Other authors continued to write tales of the fantastic without following up on Tolkien's lead. In 1970 Roger Zelazny published Nine Princes in Amber, about a man who discovers he was really destined to rule Amber, the one true world of which all others are reflections. This was the first of The Chronicles of Amber, which eventually extended to ten novels and enormous critical acclaim. Patricia A. McKillip achieved a significant breakthrough with her third novel, The Forgotten Beasts of Eld in 1974, but then surpassed it in 1976 with The Riddle-Master of Hed, the first novel of The Riddle-Master Trilogy. Children's fantasy also became more popular around this time, with notable works of juvenile fantasy including the Dark is Rising sequence by Susan Cooper (1965-77), Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson (1977) and Elidor by Alan Garner (1965).

However, the biggest and most successful juvenile fantasy of this time was Watership Down by Richard Adams, published in 1972. At first glance this book about rabbits has little to do with epic fantasy, but some of the tropes of the genre can be found within its pages. There is the lengthy, dangerous quest through unknown and hostile territory. There is a complex mythology including creation myths and spirits representing death. There is even magic, in the form of seers and visions. Foreshadowing the YA novels of modern times, the book is also fairly grim for a children's story, with major characters dying. Unusually, the novel's darker and more violent aspects survived into the excellent 1978 animated film adaptation.

By the latter part of the 1970s fantasy was a thriving form of fiction, but no-one had stepped forwards to really follow up The Lord of the Rings, or do something different with that form of fantasy. There was one last piece of the puzzle to slot into place before that would start to happen, and it came from two Americans who were not authors of fiction. Instead they were nascent game designers by the name of Gary Gygax and David Arneson, and the impact their creation would have on modern fantasy would be second only to Tolkien.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

I can't deny that Gygax and Arneson were the most important figures of 1977... but I'm also not certain it's true.

D&D certainly did a huge amount to shape the, as it were, furniture of fantasy. But it was (at least at first) primarily oriented toward the same sort of S&S that was popular at the time.

I think that Del Rey may actually have been more important. Imagine: a guy sets up a new publishing company, and decides to publish fantasy, a niche genre, and one he personally detests. What does he decide to publish specifically? Stuff that cannot get published for love or money anywhere else. First book he publishes - The Sword of Shannara. Later that year, it's Lord Foul's Bane, which had previously been rejected by every single publisher in America (for a total of 41 rejections). And the year after, he rescues McCaffrey's Pern novels (the first two had ben written long before, but had gone nowhere) and turns them into a massive, bestselling cycle.

The important thing isn't that Brooks and Donaldson moved toward modern epic fantasy... it's that they did that while being stunning succesful. I strongly suspect that Brooks, Donaldson and Pern were the three biggest selling fantasy series by far in that era, and they were all being published only because of Del Rey.

I think it's the massive commercial success of Brooks and Donaldson in particular that moved fantasy a long way toward the mainstream, and pushed the genre to follow their lead (particularly that of Brooks) in emulating Tolkien - I think that popularisation and that setting of a paradigm that was just as important as D&D growing the fanbase and providing the trappings.

At least, I'm not sure that it's not...

Flavius T. said...

Just a tiny remark - the first work of Michael Moorcock about Elric is not called "The Dreaming Souls", but "The Dreaming City".

Adam Whitehead said...

D&D did get going and became popular before 1977, but I think it was more of a two-way street: lots of D&D players became fantasy fans and vice versa, and the success of Weis/Hickman and Salvatore in the 1980s is down to the overall success of fantasy as a whole. But then D&D players got into the D&D novels and then expanded into the rest of fantasy. And many of the biggest fantasy authors around today are D&D or roleplaying vets, some more influenced by it than others.

Anonymous said...

I would like to thank you for this series on Epic Fantasy history. I've been reading the genre since 2001 continously and have never come across a summary of the history. This is the most interesting blog post series I've come across in years.

Peter Macala said...

Just want to point out: Bridge to Terabithia is realistic fiction, not fantasy... ��

Hansen said...

It is true that it took a while for fantasy to find its form. When trying to profit on the fantasy craze after Tolkien, almost all kinds of speculative fiction was referred to as fantasy, even science fiction.
Regarding fantasy and science fiction, I personal feel that science fiction first had to establish itself as a genre of its own. For writers such as HG Wells it was an attempt to adapt non-realistic fiction to a modern age that no longer believed in magic and fairytales. Fantasy in turn would later distinguish itself from science fiction. Before that happened, there was sometimes sci-fi elements involved in fantasy.
In Swords of Lankhmar, the characters encounter a german speaking guy called Karl Treuherz of Hagenbeck. He has some sort of spaceship based on advanced technology, not magic, which he use to cross between the dimensions looking for animals and creatures that would be great attractions in a zoo.
There is also a scene where the Gray Mouser is shrinking, and he is doing that by losing most of the molecules his body consist of. Later he and some rats gain mass by stealing atoms from other humans close by. Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser knows of course nothing about mass and atoms, it is just Leiber trying to be more realistic and explaining it directly to the readers (just as Naomi Novik tries to explain dragon flight by claiming there are pockets of gas in their bodies, allowing their huge bodies to fly, even if the dragons would have to look like huge balloons in the real world if that was the case).
Imagine if Tolkien had written in Lord of the Rings that the reason why there are no descriptions of female orcs is because of significant mutations in a couple of genes that only exist on the Y-chromosome, which is much larger than in humans, that makes the males much stronger, aggressive and terrifying than the females. Or claimed that Sauron was even more evil than Stalin and Hitler. The readers would know what he meant, even if the characters had never heard about these persons. The book would just not be the same.

nerimane said...

The cast of Earthsea isn't predominantly black, just the ones of the southeastern part of the Achipielago are depicted as black, dark skinned doesn't have to be black. If you see the LeGin family history, is obvious that Ged and Ogion are based in Ishi, the last yahi, so, they are racially amerindian, culturally, they are chinese, apart of the daoist filosofy in wich is based the saga, other chinese cultural traits can be seen.