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Written by Azathoth   
Monday, 16 July 2007
Article Index
Out of Space, Out of Time
The Lovecraft Controversies
The Influence of Poe
"The Fall" and "The Rats"
Lovecraft at Last
Conclusion
Works Cited
In order to understand the work of H. P. Lovecraft, it is necessary to embark on a brief explanation of his work, and the controversies that surround it.  H. P. Lovecraft was an early twentieth century author who wrote what he described as “weird fiction,” or “cosmic horror.”  In a letter written in 1934, near the end of his life, Lovecraft wrote that the purpose of his fiction was the depiction of “violations of the natural order... defiances and evasions of space, time, and cosmic law.” (Lovecraft, Lord, 268)  His work depicts these violations as “an extension rather than a negation of reality.” (Lovecraft, Lord, 213)  Lovecraft's universe contains things that are beyond our present understanding, but it is still a deterministic and scientific universe.  (Ust, 1993.)  He also writes that he is “never likely to produce anything of general acceptability,” (Lovecraft, Lord, 268) which interestingly prefigures the current uncertain status of his work.

Many of Lovecraft's supporters believe that the reluctance of the academic community to embrace Lovecraft stems from an institutionalized distaste for horror. (Russell, 2000)  While such a distaste might well be prevalent, it is not sufficient, by itself, to explain the aforementioned reluctance.  Poe's work can be categorized as horror, and yet Poe is widely accepted.  We therefore have a counterexample to the notion that Lovecraft is relegated to a lesser status due solely to his content.

There are several very good reasons that Lovecraft's work remains somewhat marginalized.  The foremost of these is, quite frankly, the inconsistent quality of his work.  Lovecraft died shortly after reaching maturity as a writer, so a fairly high percentage of his completed work can be considered immature.  Certain works, most notably “Herbert West - Reanimator,” are of such low quality that they are reprinted only on the basis of the author's name.  Other pieces, such as the short story “The Colour Out of Space,” or the prose poem “Nyarlathotep,”1 are of such high quality that they do not appear to come from the same author as “Herbert West”.  One can get a good feel for the range of Lovecraft's writing by reading his sonnet cycle, “Fungi from Yuggoth.”  Some of the sonnets are extremely weak, for example, sonnets VIII and IX.  Others seem to radiate a strange power.  I am thinking here of sonnets XXI and XXII.

Another reason that Lovecraft's work is difficult for the academic community to accept is that there are questions about what Lovecraft actually wrote.  For the most part, stories by H. P. Lovecraft are just that: Stories by H. P. Lovecraft.  Unfortunately, there are a few exceptions to this rule.  Shortly after Lovecraft's death, his literary executor, a younger writer named August Derleth, started a publishing company called Arkham House, and began reprinting Lovecraft's works.  After that was accomplished, Derleth wrote new books, attempting to mimic Lovecraft's style, and published them as newly published H. P. Lovecraft works.  When discovered, Derleth insisted that these books were “posthumous collaborations” with Lovecraft.  (Seufert, 2004)  To this day, Derleth's forged stories can be found in any Barnes & Noble, attributed to H. P. Lovecraft.  (The books to watch out for are “The Lurker at the Threshold” and “The Watchers Out of Time.”  These books are not by Lovecraft, no matter what the covers say.)  In spite of all this, some Lovecraft readers credit Derleth with keeping Lovecraft's work in print, an act that some think saved Lovecraft from total obscurity. (Connors, 2000)

To muddy the waters further, Lovecraft often wrote stories under other people's names.  At the time, he was extremely poor, and he could make money by taking amateur writings, and revising them into professional-quality short stories.  Some of these revisions were merely editing jobs.  Others involved writing an entire story from scratch, given a plot idea.  It is often difficult to tell which is which.  Revisions were generally published under the customer's name.

Another element that works against the general acceptance of Lovecraft is the apparent racism which pervades much of his work.  One can imagine a left-leaning2 professor of literature, perhaps entertaining the notion of Lovecraft as a noteworthy writer, reading of Lovecraft's casual naming of a black cat “nigger-man,” and swearing to have nothing more to do with H. P. Lovecraft.  This is perhaps the single greatest source of the controversy that surrounds Lovecraft.

Lovecraft's defenders often note that Lovecraft was a product of his time, and claim that his racism was, perhaps, less virulent than that of his contemporaries.  In “The Annotated H. P. Lovecraft,” noted Lovecraft scholar S. T. Joshi explains that, “At the turn of the century the use of the term 'nigger' was not regarded as offensive.” (Lovecraft, Annotated, 35).  This claim can be demolished by an attentive reading of Lovecraft's blatantly racist, “The Horror at Red Hook.”  Furthermore, in a letter dated December 6, 1915, Lovecraft writes, “the only non-Saxons were niggers... who consequently know their place...  so have I hated the presence of a Jew...  the Oriental mind is but ill adapted to mingle with the Aryan mind...  the one supreme race is the Teuton...  The Welsh, who have no Teutonic blood, are of little account.”  We can clearly see that, early in his career, Lovecraft was a racist, and had contempt for large segments of humanity based on race, religious belief, and ethnicity. 

The claim is often advanced that Lovecraft was not, in fact, a racist at the time of his death, but that he realized his error as he aged.  This claim is partially correct.  It does seem that Lovecraft softened his views on race before his death.  The fact that he married a Jewish woman is often pointed to as a sign that he abandoned his antisemitism.  It does appear that Lovecraft shifted his biases, in some cases, away from race and onto culture.  Near the end of his life, he abandoned notions of racial superiority and inferiority, but he still believed that races and ethnicities should remain distinct in order to preserve cultures intact, and prevent the blending of cultural identities.  (Lovecraft, Lord, 326-327)  It is noteworthy, however, that he regarded culture as a direct result of heredity. We can therefore conclude that Lovecraft was a segregationist even at the time of his death.  There has been much speculation that, had he not died young, Lovecraft would have abandoned segregationism and embraced the notion of equal rights, but this cannot be known.

Yet another thing standing in the way of Lovecraft's critical and academic acceptance is the derivative nature of much of his work.  The primary influence on Lovecraft's writing was Poe, and much of Lovecraft's work bears the clear mark of Poe's style.  Arguably, Lord Dunsany exerted a comparable influence, but Lovecraft's Dunsanian pieces have not attracted the attention that his darker, more Poe-inspired fiction has.


1 Not to be confused with the sonnet of the same title.

2 I do not mean to imply here that the right is more or less racist than the left.  It has been my experience that most (certainly not all) literature professors lean to the left.  It has also been my experience that, at  present, in America, the left tends to have a more emotional reaction to perceived racism. 



 
Discuss (3 posts)

hopfrog
Out of Space, Out of Time
Apr 04 2009 05:12:27
This thread discusses the Content article: Out of Space, Out of Time

It should be pointed out that there are many in the academic world who dismiss Poe as a bad writer. Harold Bloom has been quite outspoken in condemning Poe's works (especially, it seems, the poetry). You wrote this essay in 2007, two years after the historic edition of TALES, edited by Peter Straub for The Library of America. That book herald Lovecraft into the mainstream of acknowledged American Literary Classics, and yet there were, at the time of the book's release, a number of snobs who considered it foolishness on the part of LoA to publish a volume of what they still consider pulp fiction. I have no idea if the book has, as I once suspected it would, legitimize Lovecraft's standing in the world of Academia. Now that S. T. Joshi is living here in Seattle again, I will try and remember to ask him about this. Some people dismiss the "value" of Lovecraft's being accepted by the Highbrows: for them, his true value is as a world-famous author of entertaining weird fiction, the value of which exists in itself rather than the opinions of old gents at universities. Lovecraft's appeal to young fans will never, one hopes, be vanquished by his being taken seriously in the academic realm.
#319

hopfrog
Re:Out of Space, Out of Time
Apr 04 2009 05:41:22
In response to page three of this essay -- Lovecraft called Poe his "god of fiction," and yet at times he seems to have regretted Poe's titanic influence on his work. But it must be remembered that Lovecraft was influenced by all of literature, from his wide and extensive reading. He was highly influenced (for a brief period) by Dunsany, and by Decadent literature (which resulted in "The Hound" -- and, indeed, he was influenced by the early science-fiction of the pulp era, his reaction being to compose tales in which the entities were truly "alien," not just humans with purple skin and antennae. Late in life he strove to create non-supernatural horror fiction, and yet I find his final tale, "The Haunter in the Dark," almost Gothic in some of its horror touches -- and I say this as compliment. Lovecraft's fiction is delicious and unique because of its blend of fantasy, science fiction and horror; it was a combination that resulted in something new and refreshing that we now call "Lovecraftian horror."
#320

hopfrog
Re:Out of Space, Out of Time
Apr 04 2009 06:09:55
One of the reasons for Lovecraft's decline in productivity was that WEIRD TALES editor Farnsworth Wright rejected more and more of Lovecraft's latter fiction, due to length or extreme originality -- and because Wright was worried less Lovecraft's fiction come across as too gruesome, as happened when HPL and C. M. Eddy Jr.'s "The Loved Dead" resulted in the issue that carried that story being pulled from stores who found the tale's theme of necrophilia offensive. It is one of the great tragedies of Lovecraft's life that he went to his grave thinking himself a "failure" as a writer because so much of his best work had been rejected, because he had been unable to sell a collection of his stories to a publisher, &c &c. Lovecraft blamed a lot of his "failure" as a mature writer on the "bad influence" of pulp writing standards, of writing for "the herd" of unsophisticated readers who bought the pulps. Some of his late stories, too, have been roundly criticized by modern scholars as being bad fiction -- stories such as "The Dreams in the Witch House" and "The Thing on the Doorstep." (I found it interesting and baffling that S. T. Joshi, when he edited the fiction for the three Penguin Classics edition, chose those two tales as the title pieces for the second and third volumes. I would have used, for the second volume, "The Music of Erich Zann" or "The Case of Charles Dexter Ward"; and for the third volume I would have chosen to call it THE SHADOW OUT OF TIME AND OTHER WEIRD STORIES -- it being the first time that the recently-discovered handwritten draft of the stories manuscript had been published in a collection of Lovecraft's works.

I wonder, though, if writing for WEIRD TALES did have such a "bad" influence on Lovecraft's style? Lovecraft seemed determined to write exactly the kind of tale he wished to, and as much as he wanted to see his work published by WEIRD TALES, he never rewrote his tales to conform to any sub-literary pulp standards. Whatever faults we find with WEIRD TALES and its editors, I for one am thankful that they gave Lovecraft his one major professional market -- a market that gave him the encouragement to continue to write fiction.
#321


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