Cheating is the backbone of literature.
Lixing Sun, The Liars of Nature and the Nature of Liars
In the Charles Dickens novel Hard Times, a man raises his children with Facts. Anything that is not factual is prohibited. This includes novels, fairy tales, music, poetry, jokes or anything else that brings joy, especially to children.
This father, Dickens shows as his novel goes on, is the cheater, depriving his own children of joy and happiness and love.
| Lixing Sun |
One thing you can say about fiction, however, is that it represents truth in advertising. We are told upfront that it is all lies. Fiction means it's not true. Yet it can still be entertaining. It can still be informative. And it can still contain truth. Jesus told parables not because they were true stories but because they conveyed truth. In the same way, a novel like Hard Times conveys truth.
Sun has a better point, however, when he observes that much of what we call nonfiction is also, in fact, fiction. His own book, as I mentioned in my review the other day, illustrates this. Memoirs are not entirely reliable. Neither are history books or even science books. Mistakes are made. Some facts are ignored, while others are highlighted. All writers are biased in one way or another.
So is cheating really the backbone of literature? To me that point of view seems too much like that of the father in the Charles Dickens novel.
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