Tuesday, August 20, 2024

The War against Lovecraft

I've often joked that nowadays, in critical discussions of the creator of Conan the Cimmerian, it's almost required that he be referred as "that writer who killed himself, Robert E. Howard." It's a joke – but only barely – because you can easily find plenty of examples where the circumstances of Howard's death have become the most important thing about him. I find this frankly bizarre, as if any man can be reduced to a single fact about his life, never mind a man as complex and, let's be honest, troubled as Robert Ervin Howard.

I was reminded of this recently because I was given a copy of Free League's oversized edition of H.P. Lovecraft's "The Dunwich Horror," illustrated by François Barranger. It's an absolutely gorgeous book that pairs HPL's text with Barranger's moody, evocative artwork. The back of the book includes "A Note about H.P. Lovecraft," which reads:
There has long been an ongoing debate about Lovecraft's world view and prejudices. Lovecraft wrote in a time when racism was widespread and accepted in literature, and it is in this context that his works should be read.

Lovecraft himself expressed a racist world view and often let it shine through in his texts. Lovecraft's novels are outstanding classics, but the racism that now and then appears in certain texts is reprehensible, and something that we in Free League reject and distance ourselves from.

Despite this, we have chosen to print The Dunwich Horror without linguistic intervention. It is one of the greatest classics in horror literature. Lovecraft's stories deserve to be released and find a new readership, but at the same time, the author's racism should be approached critically and rejected.

What's the purpose of this "note?" No doubt I am biased, but I can't recall anything in "The Dunwich Horror" that could be called racist by any reasonable definition. Given that, why alert the reader that Lovecraft himself held odious views about his fellow man? Had the text of "The Dunwich Horror" contained clear and unambiguous evidence of these views, this approach might – might – have made some sense, but it doesn't. Consequently, the boast that "we have chosen to print The Dunwich Horror without linguistic intervention" is an empty one. There's nothing courageous or principled about it. Instead, it comes across as an attempt to look virtuous while doing to Lovecraft what is often done to Howard: reduce him to a single fact about his life – "that racist writer, H.P. Lovecraft."

I don't begrudge anyone his feelings about H.P. Lovecraft and his reprehensible opinions. If someone sincerely believed that even his stories with no explicitly racist content are somehow tainted because of HPL's views, I can find no fault with him. I don't share that belief any more than I share Lovecraft's beliefs about race, but it's not for me to say what is or is not beyond the pale for someone else. We should be free to decide what we like and don't like without censure, especially when it comes to works of art, whose impact is often intensely personal. 

That said, I strongly reject the tendency of the last decade or so to try to tarnish Lovecraft's literary fame by pointing out his racism at every turn. To me, it smacks of an invidious effort to diminish the influence he continues to exert on fantasy, science fiction, horror, and the wider popular imagination. When one considers that, at the time of his death in 1937, Lovecraft and his comparatively small corpus of writings were largely unknown, his lasting impact is all the more remarkable. He belongs to a very select group of popular writers, whose ideas have transcended the short span of his life and now belong to the ages. What better way to take Lovecraft down a peg than to point out again and again that he was a virulent racist?

I regularly say that it's easy, from the vantage point of the present, to hurl brickbats at our ancestors for their ignorance, shortsightedness, and other sins. That's especially true of a man like H.P. Lovecraft, who is estimated to have written nearly 90,000 letters to dozens of correspondents during his lifetime. In those letters, of which only about 10% survive, HPL revealed much about himself, his life, and his opinions. We thus have a much better sense of him as a man, both good and bad, than we do about many historical figures, which, of course, makes it all the easier to highlight his flaws, if that's what one wishes to do.

As for myself, I prefer, on the occasion of 134th anniversary of his birth, to unambiguously celebrate H.P. Lovecraft and his works. All of us reading this owe him and his singular imagination a debt of thanks. 

50 comments:

  1. "The evil that men do lives after them; The good is oft interred with their bones"

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  2. 3 cheers for James Maliszewski & Lovecraft!!! And death to the self-righteous virtue signalling of of the snowflake generation! Die scum, die!

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    1. I suggest deleting this comment if you want to keep the discussion as civil and rational as the main article.

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  3. I don't have a problem with people pointing out that Lovecraft was a racist, but when they strain to make him out as some kind of kwisatz haderach of super-racism it starts coming across to me as rather silly. It makes me wonder if people realize how ordinary a lot of his views actually were for the time. But then they might have to confront the question of whether they truly would have thought better if they'd been raised in the same circumstances.

    I also recall how Lovecraft wrote shortly before he died about how he regretted some of the reactionary things he said when he was younger, but no one ever credits him for this. Instead they'll condemn him for things he literally wrote as a boy.

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  4. It's been a weird journey for this issue. In the earliest days of the Internet, his racism was mostly ignored. Then people spent a lot of time discussing the name of his cat (who he didn't name). Then Nnedi Okorafor turned down the statue and things blew up. Then the Internet formed into a mob (as it is wont to do) and any nuanced discussion of race in Lovecraft was lost: it was decided that, not only was Lovecraft racist, but that he was the most racist person who ever lived (I saw a Hitler meme the other day that immediately devolved into a discussion about Lovecraft), and that all his works and cosmic horror itself are fundamentally racist (because only non-POC could be threatened by learning that they are not the center of existence). But the mob slowly burned itself out, and everybody came back to Lovecraft's private garden, because of his genius (and, for publishers, the $$$). So they started including these notes to stop the mob from finding them: it's like crossing yourself when you pass a graveyard.

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  5. Ha! What a land mine this topic can be. Dare I step in the minefield?

    I do think that the Anglosphere societies have come to a position where to not explicitly condemn something bad is judged by many to be seen to endorse the bad position. That's nonsense of course, and where events are historical and the author is dead, pointless. The further back in history the offending person is the more pointless it is to expend energy debating their views. Shakepeare's The Merchant of Venice is clearly antisemitic but there's no mainstream movement seeking to disband the Royal Shakespeare Company.

    That said, if the book is aimed at readers who are unfamiliar with HP Lovecraft then i believe that there's no problem with highlighting his views and how that may come up time to time in his written works. It's how that is done which I might roll my eyes at.

    To go back to Shakespeare - when we did The Merchant of Venice in 86 or 87 my English teacher went out of her way to explain that the play was antisemitic and that although such beliefs were the norm in Shakepeare's day that we would find some elements shocking. When these aspects came up we stopped and had a discussion about them. It doesn't detract from the enjoyment that I get from the text nor his other plays. When I say I enjoy Shakespeare, no one asks me whether I'm antisemitic nor do they ask me to condemn his antisemitism.

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    1. Hm, Richard Wagner’s music wasn’t played in Israel until relatively recently. Just bringing this up as an example of a mainstream movement effectively banning a dead author’s work.

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    2. Maybe because 6 Million listeners where missing from the crowd...

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    3. Thanks for that information. While I was aware that he was popular with the Nazis and therefore must have had antisemitic views I wasn't aware that Israel had a convention that his music wasn't played. Inhad a read on him on wikipedia and also a BBC article on the controversy surrounding an inadvertent playing by the Israeli broadcasting service in 2018. In the BBC article there's a direct quote from the Head of the Israel Wagner Society which makes the point that many Israelis can separate the man's views from the beauty of his music.

      There's a plurality of views.

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    4. Merchant of Venice is an interesting and complex case for racism of the author based on the text of their work - I would agree that there isn't really any room to doubt the play's anti-Semitism.

      On the other hand, it is also possible to perform the play straight from the text and completely transform Shylock into a sympathetic victim and make into a damning indictment of the anti-Semitism of his world and peers. Mostly just a matter of costuming and line delivery really.

      What does that mean for Shakespeare and his own potential racism? I don't know the answer, but it certainly makes for a more complex debate, and I expect a much more nuanced appreciation of the play than would have been evident when first performed.

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  6. I don’t see the need to retread what is likely an argument that will never find common ground. What I will do is answer James’ original question of - who is this disclaimer for?

    The answer is, of course, those who wrote it, for the purposes of covering their own asses. They are essentially saying “yes, we realize this guy said some wholly ignorant and abhorrent things, and while they were common ignorant things to say in his time, we understand people don’t think that way now…but we’d very much like to continue making money off this stuff so please buy it anyway, huh?”

    This type of thing happens a lot lately. Disney+ includes a similar disclaimer on cartoons with racist caricatures and such. WWE puts a similar disclaimer on some content that includes multiple murderer Chris Benoit and on the show that unadvisedly continued to go on after Owen Hart died. These are ass-covering measures, nothing more. If the publisher really thought these ideas were so abhorrent, they’d not publish the work at all. But they like money, dear boy.

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  7. An alternate thought about the idea that this reduces him to a Racist author.
    Perhaps the foreward is trying to say simply “even though he had incredibly problematic views, his ideas about horror were incredible”
    To me, that elevates him above simply being a Racist Author. It pushing him Up a peg.

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  8. I agree with this. Even if you find this factoid unbearable, deal with it and move on. either enjoy his work, or don't.

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  9. This seems like an editorial error of some sort. I just reviewed the story, and the closest thing to racism in it are the introduction talking about the inbred people of Dunwich constituting a "race" of their own, and a couple of instances of Wilbur Whately being described as "black", and his features being described as "animalistic", with "thick lips, large-pored, yellowish skin, coarse crinkly hair". I don't think any reference to any real world ethnicity is actually intended by Lovecraft here, though his choice of features to describe as animalistic, ugly, and inhuman is a bit reminiscent of some unsavory stuff.

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    1. Thanks for the review. That note on the author would have been more useful if the editors had been explicit about what might have required “linguistic intervention”.

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  10. I enjoy Lovecraft's work and the surrounding mythos. I think I've read every story, or at least I had a book that purported to compile everything that I read cover to cover. But he not only is racist by modern standards, he was particularly racist even by the standards of his time. And it shows up in his work, most notably The Shadow Over Innsmouth, which is literally a horror story about miscegenation. But it hardly ends there.

    I'm not going to stop reading his books or refuse to play Call of Cthulhu, but I think it's fair to acknowledge his ideas and how they are expressed within his works.

    I also really enjoy how many recent authors have continued Lovecraft's themes but often in the service of intentionally anti-racist stories. https://reactormag.com/columns/reading-the-weird/the-lovecraft-reread/ involves two writers who have worked in Lovecraftian themes doing a read-through of his stories with a critical eye (but still with an appreciation of being long-time fans of his work). For me, this kind of analysis actually deepens my appreciation of the literature.

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    1. These claims are often repeated, but I find them pretty unconvincing. The statement that he was "not only racist by modern standards, but was particularly racist even by the standards of his time" has become a kind of shibboleth on the internet. Don't get me wrong, the man was racist, but the competition for "particularly racist" in the world of the late 20s/early 30s was stiff. I don't think HPL finishes in the top 50%.

      I'm also not convinced that Shadow Over Innsmouth is about race at all. It is, of course, literally about miscegnation (between humans and fish people), but the Deep Ones are not coded as a human race but are rather entirely alien. I would argue that it's a story about learning that you have inherited mental illness (to the extent that it's not just a story about fish men), which no doubt would concern HPL since both his parents died in asylums. And citing Shadow as the ultimate racist story is ironic since HPL literally wrote a story about a man discovering, in horror, that he had an ape as a grandmother, which you would think would be more obvious grist for the mill.

      But as you point out, the irony is that cosmic horror shouldn't be racist. If humanity is insignificant, then surely human "races" are beyond insignificant. It's sad that HPL couldn't embrace the rational conclusion of his philosophy, but great that other authors have.

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    2. "And it shows up in his work, most notably The Shadow Over Innsmouth, which is literally a horror story about miscegenation."

      The reason for that is because it was commonly believed at the time that congenital handicaps were caused by having mixed bloodlines. So it's actually quite understandable that Lovecraft would have such a thing on his mind since mental illness seemingly ran in his family.

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    3. Lovecraft was an American living in an era of segregation, lynching and a ban on interracial marriage. He lived a decade before the holocaust and the Nazis. He was not "particularly racist by the standards of his time". I think you do a disservice to the actual real suffering of people in 1920s America when you say things like that.

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    4. "He was not "particularly racist by the standards of his time"" I should say that it was possible for someone living back then to not be racist, or to be so racist as to stick out in a crowd. Part of the problem that is leading to this approach to the past - including art and literature and film - is the leveling out of all forms of prejudice to one form racist. That is, whether you dropped an ethnic slur in a 30 year old email or took over a central European nation and murdered millions of ethnic minorities in death camps, you're just a racist. One philosophy professor I know said we've done for racist what the English language did for Love. That is, a 'one word fits all' when that doesn't do justice to the complexity of the subject either here, or anywhere else in the world where it can, and has, been found.

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  11. Thanks, James. I appreciate your thoughtful approach to what also seems to me performative moralizing with next to no literary or ethical benefit. It's sad to see.

    This unavoidably gets into bigger and quite pressing cultural and political issues that probably aren't helpful to air on your blog. I'll just say that I sometimes have the suspicion that the ongoing assault on HPL is in part because he is the "softest" target of the big 3 of fantasy. If he goes, it will be on to Lewis and Tolkien.

    P.S. I've written elsewhere about antisemitism, Weird fiction, and HPL's story "The Horror at Red Hook" as part of my current book project on fantasy literature and the Jews.
    https://investigationsandfantasies.com/2023/06/05/from-dust-to-ooze-antisemitism-and-the-weird/

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  12. Thank you, James. Well said.

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  13. I agree. It's been going on for some time, and getting worse. From a history perspective, the Presentism that was always rejected in my younger days is now the mandated approach to historical studies, if we could call them that. Things like this are simply caught up in the current. I'd say be glad that it was published. There's much to be unpacked here, but I don't comment much (being an RPG novice), though I frequently stop by. Still, this is probably not the place to wade into the serious issues involved, other than saying I fully agree, and hopefully more will begin putting a brake on this trend.

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  14. Would the virtue signalers sell their home if they discovered it was built by a racist? Or would they just put a sign in the lawn warning all passers-by that the architect was a racist? -- but they're going to live in it anyway. How about their car? So, why then, put a sign in your book? You do not have to justify in any way your love for the tremendous work of either Howard or Lovecraft.

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  15. Well it all started as a campaign to change the trophy for the World Fantasy Award - which used to be a stylised bust of HP Lovecraft. Whilst there is considerable evidence of his clinical xenophobia in his fictional stories (and this is what conveys a certain authenticity in the reaction to the revelation of the existence of eldritch horrors in them), much of the evidence presented was extracted from his collected correspondence, which I suspect few people have actually read, even amongst those supporting the campaign. "He is a racist," being a rather effective rallying cry when trying to convince a group of people not to give you a bust of an old white dude.

    The problem is that with the presumed success of the campaign (no official reason was actually given for why the trophy was changed in 2016 to a tree in front of a new moon), it unfortunately set in stone in the cultural zeitgeist the idea that HP was a racist, when the issue is a lot more complicated than simply applying modern ethics to an earlier time period. For example if we were to apply modern ideas to HP I suspect a DSM5 diagnosis of phobic disorder of strangers/other is warranted. Except you cannot make such a diagnosis from the works of a man. The map is not the territory. The real situation is always more complicated.

    So publishers feel they should apologise for the "problematic" nature of Lovecraft's work, despite there being a lack of evidence in the particular work. And the easiest excuse is that it was a different time, with different ethics. And we are better now. When often, we are not.

    Conflating art and artist is a common theme in discussion these days. But personally, to return to our opening protagonist, reading the works if Robert E Howard has never led to any suicidal ideation in me. Instead it is very much a feeling of the embrace of life itself.

    The map is not the territory.
    The artist is not the art.

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    1. Wrong. The art does stand on it's own but it is also always attached to the artist because art means absolutely nothing (how lovecraftian in cosmic pessimism!) without other human actors to engage with it in any relational-symbolic way.

      To say the racism, xenophobia, and eugenics aren't part of his "art" which reflects from him is comically stupid (not to mention a whole slew of those early clown authors like Edgar Rice Burroughs and other eugenic turd eaters).

      He's not good enough of an artist (or emotionally intelligent enough) to detach his own paranoias from his writing.

      If anyone is the snowflake (like the comment further above) - it's the weird socially deformed seething "old guard" nerds that the world left in the dust in their teens to play with toys until their coffin.

      "Obvious inherited predisposition toward vice & petty crime sez eugenicist Davenport in 1915. Naked tow-headed kids playing in dirt with hogs & dogs. Famously exotic looking women all notorious sluts. The pale strange eyes. It all drove Lovecraft INSANE. Mixed race. Dagon worshippers. Starry-wisdom sect. Backwoods cacogenic agents of Chaos."

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  16. I find disclaimers in books to be silly. Just publish interesting stuff and read interesting stuff and don't worry about any of it. Life is short.

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  17. It should be an afterword, at most. When I read the Chronicles of Narnia, I had no idea they were Christian allegory, and I wished I had never learned they were - it completely ruined my enjoyment of them as a child. Enjoying the works of flawed people is impossible to avoid, especially if they are of any age. It's not like they are benefiting from my enjoyment - they're dead and it's public domain. It's Presentism and will be applied to us in the future.

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  18. If you do not write such disclaimers, nowadays someone might raise his hand in social media, point the finger, and pull your business in a very long and painful discussion.
    Why Free League, and others, run that risk? I do not blame any company doing that, just trying to publish good content and live their lives peacefully.

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  19. I wonder those who advance these arguments ever consider what they will write about our age when we're dead and gone. "And they saw evil everywhere, except in themselves."

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  20. We must have disclaimers!!!

    What if I were to accidentally read, or watch, or hear something that offended me????
    What would I do then? Years of therapy, most likely.

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  21. I have always found these sorts of disclaimers immensely hypocritical. "Lovecraft is so racist that you should be made to feel bad about it, and you must engage in a new struggle session every time you pick up one of his books, but he's not so racist that I can't make money off of him. Now pat me on the back for not censoring a 100-year-old story."

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  22. If alliteration is the lowest form of wit, finger-wagging disapproval of long-dead authors is the lowest form of woke.

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  23. “The population is a hopeless tangle and enigma; Syrian, Spanish, Italian, and negro elements impinging upon one another, and fragments of Scandinavian and American belts lying not far distant. ” horror at red hook; HP Lovecraft.

    Hahaha i love it! Me; having the ancestry he ranted against; amused me. Some; may not think the same. -verdugo

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  24. I've said this several times when it comes to HPL and his racism: taking HPL out of historical context does a disservice to his works. Yes, according to our "modern" sensibilities, he would be considered racist, but in the time that he lived (1920s-30s), not so much. It does not diminish the importance of his works when it comes to it's influence on both the horror and science fiction genres. The simple fact that a "disclaimer" is included with the republishing of his work is more telling on how some people today are too ignorant and mentally fragile to understand this.

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  25. I honestly did not know that HPL was considered a racist. I have read all of his work (although it has been a while since I last read them), and I don't think I could point to anything in his work that I would call racist. I have a similar experience with Tolkien and his work (my experience here is limited to 'Lord of the Rings' and 'The Hobbit'): I recently heard people calling him a racist as well, and again I don't think I could point out anything in those books that I would consider racist. Oh, well.

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  26. James Madison owned slaves. But I still agree with the Bill of Rights.

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  27. I share the other commenters' disappointment with Free League Publishing for their Lovecraft disclaimer, but they may well have a sound business reason for including that statement.

    Free League Publishing (FLP) is headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden. Compared to the United States, Sweden has harsh hate-crime laws and no First Amendment protections for mere speech. Chapter 16, Section 8 of the Swedish Criminal Code states, in part, that "[a]ny person who in a statement or communication that is disseminated threatens or expresses contempt for a national or ethnic group or other such group of persons with allusion to race, skin colour, national or ethnic origin, creed or sexual orientation or gender identity, shall be sentenced for agitation against an ethnic group to imprisonment for at most two years or, if the offence is minor, to pay a fine." See https://hatecrime.osce.org/hate-crime-legislation-sweden

    In other words, merely publishing a statement that "expresses contempt" for another ethnic group based on race can get you in trouble with Swedish law enforcement. Now, at the end of the day, publishing HPL's more incendiary stories without any disclaimer probably wouldn't mean a years-long trip to the slammer for anyone at FLP. However, as often happens in the U.S., the process becomes the punishment. A bored policeman might seize on a stray complaint from an offended customer to set this Swedish hate-crime apparatus in motion. I could easily envision FLP forced to provide reams of documents in response to law-enforcement demands or compelled to present its employees for mandatory "interviews" with cold-eyed interrogators. Even if such an enquiry came to nothing, FLP would still spend time and money dealing with it--time and money it could otherwise devote to its actual (small) business.

    With that parade of horribles as background, the business case for adding this face-saving disclaimer on Lovecraft's work becomes irrefutable. It makes clear that no one at FLP subscribes to his outdated and obnoxious attitudes and that FLP published his work for literary and commercial reasons and not to disparage any racial or ethnic group. Were FLP subjected to a law-enforcement investigation over why they published this story in the first place, they could immediately point to this public disclaimer to rebut the charge that FLP or any of its employees violated Sweden's hate-crime laws. The disclaimer emphasizes that FLP is not expressing contempt for anyone on racial grounds. Pointing it out in response to law-enforcement questions might well stop any investigation right then and there and save FLP considerable time, money, and heartache. And it costs nothing to include it--except (maybe) a little pride.

    I obviously don't know whether FLP added the Lovecraft disclaimer so that they could short-circuit a Swedish hate-crimes investigation, but I also wouldn't be surprised if this was one of the reasons they did it.

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  28. Everything said in the disclaimer is true. The only way the disclaimer is a problem is if your position is either (1) that the truth needs to be stated less; or (2) that the influence of the Free League is so overwhelming as to be disproportionate. By all means, read and enjoy Lovecraft. But if you are bothered by the fact that others wish to contextualize him, I don't know what to tell you.

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  29. While I can see the past is a foreign country, I can still take some comfort in imagining how much he would have disliked the modern world. We don't have to like or agree with all the artists and writers of the past even if we enjoy some of their works.

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  30. What's the purpose of this "blog post"? No doubt I am biased, but I can't see anything in "A Note about H.P. Lovecraft" that could be called an attempt "to tarnish Lovecraft's literary fame" by any reasonable definition. Indeed, the very opposite appears to be the case, with the writer(s) asserting that "Lovecraft's novels are outstanding classics", "The Dunwich Horror...is one of the greatest classics in horror literature" and "Lovecraft's stories deserve to be released and find a new readership". Given that, why assert that "it smacks of an invidious effort to diminish the influence he continues to exert on fantasy, science fiction, horror, and the wider popular imagination"? Had the text of "A Note about H.P. Lovecraft" contained clear and unambiguous evidence of these views, this approach might – might – have made some sense, but it doesn't. Consequently, the boast that "it comes across as an attempt to...reduce him to a single fact about his life" is an empty one. There's nothing courageous or principled about it. Instead, it comes across as an attempt to look virtuous while brushing aside the reason for the Note's existence - to provide the readers of this new edition of "The Dunwich Horror" with important context, allowing them to make up their own minds about how they engage with it (and, should they choose, other works of H.P Lovecraft).

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    1. Nice touch putting "blog post" in scare quotes. You got this!

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  31. Incidentally to the above comment on Sweden, they may have that law but they don't implement it any longer - even left-wing politicians (which by US standards/perception would be virtually communist-adjacent) have come out very strong against muslim immigration in the last couple of years, one citing grenades exploding in his neighbourhood as the reason for his change of heart. The Social Democrats even warned Ireland against following similar immigration policies to Sweden's in the European parliament.

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