Dominic wrote:What O6 and I are saying is that the commonality of a belief does not make it more or less accurate.
Clearly, but neither of you are making a good argument for it with these completely unrelated examples. And again, the wider held audience interpretation is the more widely accepted meaning for the song. Even the band seems to agree given their refusal to perform it with it not expressing the meaning they intended showing how the audience interprets a piece does indeed have merit.
At times, proof may be difficult or impossible to acquire. But, that does not nullify the fact of the author's intent any more than it nullifies the fact of the author's existence or the fact of the author having written the story. Interpretations that are contrary to the author's intent are wrong. They are factually impossible because the "thing" that the audience is using to justify their interpretatino is *not* in the story because the author did not put it there.
Again, where have I ever said that the author's intent should be nullified? Of course nothing will change that the author wrote it and what their own intent was in writing it was. That's not the point. The point is, a story is not so direct as you make it seem. Interpretation is not something that is "factually" impossible just because the author may not have intended for it. All that means is the author didn't indent for it, but that doesn't mean another interpretation cannot be present within the story at the same time.
The idea *should* be how to determine meaning and intent when proof is difficult or impossible to find.
I'm sorry, but that's just ridiculous. If it's impossible to find the author's own intent, then all your going to get is the audiences interpretation of what the author's intent might be, but that's still just the audiences interpretation, no matter how you look at it.
(Again, one can critque the author's execution of their plan, or even the worthiness of the plan. But, one cannot argue what the author's plan was.)
Again, I'm not arguing that you can argue the author's plan. I'm arguing that you can have a different interpretation of the author's story than the author intended.
It is the author's job to account for the relevant points.
It's the author's job to write a good story. And they are not infallible. They cannot account for every single possibility that can be interpreted in a piece.
In cases like this, where the work is owned by a corporation, editorial fiat trumps author intent. Lee does not own any of the characters in any iteration of "X-Men". Marvel does. Marvel can give somebody, (Singer in this case), the right to interperet and define characters.
You're missing the point of the example, which remains regardless of who owns the X-Men franchise. And it wasn't the characters Singer was defining, rather, he making an allegory for the situation Iceman was in over the course of the story of the movie, which can be applied to the X-Men as a whole. But this isn't an interpretation that everyone would come to.
But, it is impossible to honestly derive meaning that is not there to be found. And, the only meaning that a work of fiction can have is what the author put in. Like any other product, fiction only exists as it is made, nat as how its consumer may otherwise desire it to be.
Once again, just because you may not intend to leave something else doesn't mean there is nothing else to be found. It's not impossible to find meaning just because the author may not have intended it, nor is the authors intent the only meaning that can be interpreted.
The reason that there is more than one theory in literary theory is that "Literature" as an academic field is a boondoggle.
So you think the study of literature is a waste of time and that all those people are just doing it to look busy? So now you're belittling an entire academic field rather than admit that there is merit to literary theories that you do not personally agree with? I'm sorry to say Dom, but that sounds incredibly arrogant.
At some point, it became less about discovery and understanding, less about honest attempts at creativity and innovation, and more about making those things more difficult. The fact that Literary theory artificially creates jobs for people with no apparently marketable skill probably also plays a role here.
How is interpreting meaning from a story besides only a narrow look at the authors intent "less about discovery and understanding"? If anything that's about looking at
more to discover and understand about the piece, and potentially the author as well. Honestly looking at the creativity, complexity and innovations of the craft. Literary theory isn't an artificial way to create jobs. It's all a legitimate study of the complexities of literature. Whether or not you agree with that is a whole other issue.
I am not writing this as a Law Student, nor as an MBA candidate, nor as an Engineer. I am writing this as someone who majored in English because I had the (frankly bizarre) misfortune to have met mostly honest professors early in my academic career. Later, when I was fully exposed to Literary Theory, and realized just how prevalent it is, I realized just how dishonest the field was, and why it is held in such contempt by other fields. The fact that so many theorists find a niche in teaching, (at more than one level), ensures that what should be obvious lies will be continually perpetuated.
I'm sorry to say Dom, but as an English major myself, it sounds to me like you have a skewed outlook on the field as a whole. It's not dishonest as you claim it is. Really, the dishonest thing here appears, to me, that you were not fully exposed to the full range of Literary Theory and now regard part of it as distasteful when it's simply just another way at looking at literature than you personally prefer.