| | Joe Maurone quoted Ayn Rand: "Stories like The Magic Carpet and Cinderella are justified even though the events are metaphysically impossible, because those events are used to project some idea which is rationally applicable to all human beings The author indulges in metaphysical exaggeration, but the meaning of the story is applicable to human life." Ayn Randism is not Objectivism. Rand did not understand science fiction and her horrible attempt at Galt's Motor proves that.
More to the point here, The Arabian Nights and Cinderella had totally different purposes, motives, audiences and meanings. In the Arabian Nights, Sinbad, Ali Babba, and Alladin succeed by bravery, intelligence, insight, and steadfastness. Their world is a wonderous place of great events. Besides, when those stories were invented (copied, actually, from the Greeks in many ways), it was not clear that flying carpets were metaphysically impossible -- after all we have airplanes today...
Cinderella is the opposite of that in every way. The best that can be said is that the nice girl marries the prince, so life is good (for them). They did nothing to achieve it. Cinderella would still be scrubbing the kitchen floor but for her Fairy Godmother.
Joe Maurone quoted Ayn Rand: And, of course, she defends stories like Buck Rogers and such in The Romantic Manifesto. As Rand wrote, enemies of Romanticism try to convince the little space cadets that "to be like Buck Rogers means to wear a space helmet and blast armies of Martians with a disintegrator gun, and that he'd better give up such notions if he ever expects to make a respectable living." But she goes on to say that it is not the "impractical fantasy" they object to; it's not the Martians and ray guns that aren't possible, it's the striving for something better, the adventure, the passion that they feel is impossible."
I understand Rand's point. She was speaking symbolically. She knew little of Buck Rogers, in fact. First of all, ray guns are possible, were probable then, and exist today. More to the point, Buck Rogers did not fight Martians (not at first), but rather, the story is an allegory for the geopolitics of the 1930s. In the movie serials, Killer Kane is a fascist dictator. The forces of democracy are fighting from the underground. That spin off was consonant with the possible (if not probable) world of Armaggedon 2419: the Han (Chinese; Huns) rule. In the companion series, Flash Gordon, our solar system is invaded by the Planet Mongo ruled by Ming the Merciless. Science fiction is always about the present.
But even when they came out originally, those space operas were light years behind the best science fiction of the times. (See Before the Golden Age, edited by Isaac Asimov.) Science fiction is different from Cinderella along many dimensions. First of all, science fiction depends on an invention. Generally, science fiction shows the affect of an invention (or discovery) on the lives of people. This was impossible before the age of invention. And the people change. They experience external events with changes of fortune and circumstance, of course, but those causes changes within them, at least in the best stories, they do.
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