I have heard of Lovecraft before but I have never really made an effort to look into it. This thread piqued my interest; I might consider looking into it some more myself. I'm learning new things everyday.
Beautifully put, and I've never even read any Lovecraft, or like horror stories much, but this makes me want to.Ordinaryundone said:The fear in Lovecraft is a fear of the unknown. Of a universe that is so vast that humans can't even comprehend a fraction of it. We are so small and weak, whose to say there aren't things out there that are to us as we are to ants. Massive entities of such incredible age and harboring such unknowable malice for lesser existence that their mere EXISTENCE threatens our species as a whole. That if one of them were to turn an errant eye, on accident, and spy us across the vastness of the cosmos then our fates would be sealed before we could even cry for help. And no power, religion or science, can hope to stay this inevitability. Our only respite is that these beings either haven't noticed us yet, or are having too much fun molding and shaping our fragile lives.
It's the fear of the deep ocean, of great terrors so close and yet hidden from our plain sight. It's a fear of your your fellow man, of the hidden urges and desires held in their heart and your own. It's the fear of knowledge, of the insatiable thirst for understanding that leads to these truths, and the inevitable refuge in insanity that must follow.
Yeah, if you are just focusing on his monsters you have no imagination.
Ordinaryundone gets it. The Lovecraft world is frightening, but you have to get into the mythos and appreciate the whole that he is conveying. This isn't about a scary monster, no this is about the inevitable decline of all that is normal, all that we consider good. If you attract the attention of these entities, if your family line gets polluted, you are f*cked. If there are rats in the walls of an old estate you inherited, if you receive a correspondence from an old gentleman whose dogs keep dying, doom approaches.Ordinaryundone said:The fear in Lovecraft is a fear of the unknown. Of a universe that is so vast that humans can't even comprehend a fraction of it. We are so small and weak, whose to say there aren't things out there that are to us as we are to ants. Massive entities of such incredible age and harboring such unknowable malice for lesser existence that their mere EXISTENCE threatens our species as a whole. That if one of them were to turn an errant eye, on accident, and spy us across the vastness of the cosmos then our fates would be sealed before we could even cry for help. And no power, religion or science, can hope to stay this inevitability. Our only respite is that these beings either haven't noticed us yet, or are having too much fun molding and shaping our fragile lives.
It's the fear of the deep ocean, of great terrors so close and yet hidden from our plain sight. It's a fear of your your fellow man, of the hidden urges and desires held in their heart and your own. It's the fear of knowledge, of the insatiable thirst for understanding that leads to these truths, and the inevitable refuge in insanity that must follow.
Yeah, if you are just focusing on his monsters you have no imagination.
Ha ha! Well put.thaluikhain said:IMHO, Lovecraftian stories generally completely fail to be scary. Yeah, big tentacled beasties that are going to awaken and devour all humanity bwah bwah bwah.
On the other hand, stories written by Lovecraft often were scary. He didn't use big monsters in lieu of actually writing a scary story, which alot of people do nowdays.
Aliens that had come from the unknown vastness of space to settle on a planet beyond Neptune isn't scary. Even aliens that come to Earth aren't scary, if they are here just to quarry stone that doesn't occur where they live, and go out of their way to avoid humans isn't scary. But they were scary when written by Lovecraft.
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On the other hand, Lovecraft is also unsettling because of of his issues. Half his stories seem to be about good, clean humans being corrupted by interbreeding with degenerate races. Lovecraftian fish people do not fight for their rights as US citizens, and interbreeding does not happen after a human and alien hook up at a party.
Sure, product of his times and all, but that doesn't stop his stuff from seeming very dubious at times nowdays.
An insect that cannot even begin to stop eating its little leaves to see what is the truth!ThePenguinKnight said:This.Stalydan said:Lovecraft's style is essentially that we're all ants in a universe filled with giants and incomprehensible landscapes. They don't care about us and will crush us without a second thought. Personally, I find to be a refreshing divergence from the typical "Normal but with something really wrong" style of horror where you can relate to the character but instead have a world where there are creatures so horrifying that looking at them drives people insane. Then you can let your mind do the work for you.
My favourite piece of his mythos is R'lyeh, the sunken city with impossible architecture. It's something that you can imagine being so alien that it's terrifying.
I'd even argue that they're less about being "scary" and more about philosophy than anything. It's about being so insignificant, sheltered, and self absorbed we fail to see the real terrors in the world and therefore go mad just by the sight of them. It's like trying to have an insect comprehend neuroscience.
Better yet, you can BURN them. Show them stupid words who's boss.DarkRyter said:Well, duh. It's just a bunch of words.
You can just NOT read them. It's that easy.
I would be honoured to be eaten by Cthulhu.I say old chap said:Also if murder, rape and digestion by fish-men, ghouls or shoggoths doesn't scare you, I guess you must be tough. You might be just keeping distance and preventing yourself from getting into the material though.
True. A lot of modern audiences are all about cheap scares. Stupid dead stupid teenager films.Waaghpowa said:People thought that Edgar Allen Poe's The Raven was pretty damn scary back when it was originally written. It's all about context of the times. Or maybe it's a sign of our times; people aren't so good with subtlety and wont "get it" unless it's right in their face. Kinda like modern comedies.
Mmmmyep. You hit the nail on the head with that one.Kaulen Fuhs said:Cool.
What's your point? Fear is 100% subjective.
I think that one of the reasons Lovecraft's brand of horror is less "scary" today is that, sans monsters, the whole "we are tiny monkeys living on a tiny rock floating through a universe we do not (and probably cannot) understand" thing is something that we have basically come to terms with over the last century.Ordinaryundone said:The fear in Lovecraft is a fear of the unknown. Of a universe that is so vast that humans can't even comprehend a fraction of it. We are so small and weak, whose to say there aren't things out there that are to us as we are to ants. Massive entities of such incredible age and harboring such unknowable malice for lesser existence that their mere EXISTENCE threatens our species as a whole. That if one of them were to turn an errant eye, on accident, and spy us across the vastness of the cosmos then our fates would be sealed before we could even cry for help. And no power, religion or science, can hope to stay this inevitability. Our only respite is that these beings either haven't noticed us yet, or are having too much fun molding and shaping our fragile lives.
It's the fear of the deep ocean, of great terrors so close and yet hidden from our plain sight. It's a fear of your your fellow man, of the hidden urges and desires held in their heart and your own. It's the fear of knowledge, of the insatiable thirst for understanding that leads to these truths, and the inevitable refuge in insanity that must follow.
Yeah, if you are just focusing on his monsters you have no imagination.
I would say that if you were racist you would find them even scarier.Kahunaburger said:I think that one of the reasons Lovecraft's brand of horror is less "scary" today is that, sans monsters, the whole "we are tiny monkeys living on a tiny rock floating through a universe we do not (and probably cannot) understand" thing is something that we have basically come to terms with over the last century.Ordinaryundone said:The fear in Lovecraft is a fear of the unknown. Of a universe that is so vast that humans can't even comprehend a fraction of it. We are so small and weak, whose to say there aren't things out there that are to us as we are to ants. Massive entities of such incredible age and harboring such unknowable malice for lesser existence that their mere EXISTENCE threatens our species as a whole. That if one of them were to turn an errant eye, on accident, and spy us across the vastness of the cosmos then our fates would be sealed before we could even cry for help. And no power, religion or science, can hope to stay this inevitability. Our only respite is that these beings either haven't noticed us yet, or are having too much fun molding and shaping our fragile lives.
It's the fear of the deep ocean, of great terrors so close and yet hidden from our plain sight. It's a fear of your your fellow man, of the hidden urges and desires held in their heart and your own. It's the fear of knowledge, of the insatiable thirst for understanding that leads to these truths, and the inevitable refuge in insanity that must follow.
Yeah, if you are just focusing on his monsters you have no imagination.
That's not to say that I don't think Lovecraft is worth a read - his stories are absolutely fascinating in terms of how influential they were over the SF and horror genres. IMO if you can get past the racism there's some really good writing there.