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Do you post unpopular opinions on book discussion threads?
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Dawn
(last edited Apr 15, 2016 06:09AM)
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Apr 15, 2016 06:09AM

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I agree that wording can mean so much when conveying an opinion. I know I've got my feathers ruffled more than once when people are critical of certain books or genres - but it's often less that they don't like it, and more how they phrase it.
And people *do* place value judgments on books and opinions and things. And I don't just mean "They don't like this book I like, so they're saying I'm wrong."
I mean sometimes people do act like you are wrong for liking something.
Like, "I don't know how anyone can like this garbage". So you're not just judging the book, you are judging the people who like said book as well - and I think that's when the real nastiness starts coming out in response.

Human factors engineering is crucial. The older I get the more my back appreciates it!

I did not read your spoiler, but your perspective about the first book addresses why I didn't like it. It is interesting that you don't think this is true of subsequent books.
Guess I need to put The Magician King on my TBR list.

I agree with this...
But this is also sometimes I tend to shy away from getting into a debate, or am extra careful about how I word things.
Like, I absolutely hate when people tell me I missed something if I didn't like a book. Hate it! Because, clearly, if I didn't like something it must mean I'm stupid or dense and "didn't get it" and not just that I didn't like it, right?
But I can't say that I haven't thought the same thing towards other people. "No, what you're complaining about is the point, you dimwit!" (I think your American Gods example is a a great one, actually.)
I just don't *say* that.
I might say, "Oh, well, I see what you're saying but I think that was done on purpose because... "
But in the back on my mind I'm screaming, "Gods, why are you such a moron?!"
I think some people just lack that filter between their brain and nastier impulses and their mouths/fingers. (Or some people just don't feel like they should have to censor themselves... but I tend more towards the "we all have to rub along together" kind of approach.)
Which is probably why I feel safer to discuss things on line - because my filter doesn't work so well in person.
⌐_⌐
¬_¬
*flees*

You just didn't get it.
*ducks*

Me too. ;)

You just didn't get it.
*ducks*"


I think you hit the nail on the head, here.
I have no problem expressing dissenting opinions. However, there are certain groups in which I am less likely to express because it quickly boils over into comments that cross the line into personal attacks. Even if they are not aimed at me, I do not have patience for what I perceive to be very rude behavior.
Sometimes, it is more subtle. If you love a book and feel there is a lot of complexity to a story, and then someone pops up with "the plot was very childish and immature," that can feel like someone is saying that you might be childish and immature.
I try hard to phrase my comments to avoid this type of misunderstanding, but I can't say I am always successful at it. I am all the way thinker on the Meyers-Briggs Thinker/Feeler spectrum. However, 60% of people are feelers, so I try to adapt my coldly logical nature to account for feeling and sentiment.
One of the things that I appreciate so much about THIS particular group is that most of the members are very respectful to one another. And, when someone crosses a line, the mods step in. I wish more groups were as well moderated.

Show is pretty ok... Pretty different from the books IMO, but entertaining when I put away my expectations.

But it feels like that sometimes, yeah?

It's funny you use that example, because I had a kerfuffle in one of my reviews because I said the plot was, ultimately, rather straightforward and someone who read my review disagreed and thought it was complex and nuanced, and essentially accused me of lying...
He also told me my opinion on the characters was "bordering on ridiculous" and that the reason I didn't like it was because apparently I need things spelled out for me and with this masterpiece of a book I'd "actually have to do a little thinking and understanding on you own".
So, yeah... that didn't go well...


That's just, like, your opinion, man. /thedude
All kidding aside, I don't understand your second sentence. Right and wrong are value judgements the same as opinions.

Most of us have an emotional attachment to the books that we love and find it difficult to accept any criticism of something so cherished.
also ...
Nobody likes the digital equivalent of being pointed at and told they are wrong (which happens a lot on the internet).
I say, post and be damned! You are never going to hit it off with everyone, and the stronger your feelings on something, the stronger the reaction will be. All you can be is honest. Right and wrong do not enter into it. It's an opinion, not an exercise in point scoring.
In the past I have gotten into some right old dingdongs, mainly concerning what Peter Jackson was doing to the 'Lord of the Rings', but in the end it made not a ha'porth of difference. What it did do was increase my own appreciation for Tolkien's creation in leaps and bounds.
(And can I just add that all stories can be traced back to the caves of Lascaux and Chauvet.)

Unless it is a serious fault in logic or fact, I never hang around to argue to the pros and cons. My opinion is mine alone, and I don't expect anyone to share it, or that I can convince someone to share it.

The trick is to not accuse others of being wrong, but to state the contrary position as a personal opinion, which you're able to articulate beyond vague and emotive language like "it was stupid" or "it was immature" or "I hated it."
For example, I have expressed my loathing for Peter Jackson's LotR movies in a lot of discussions. Most people really loved those movies, and that's fine. They aren't as picky as me. But when I discuss my opinion of them, I am able to point to specific things that I found objectionable, such as major plot changes, fundamental alterations to the characters, changes to fairly minor scenes that ended up requiring additions to the story later on which made some of the plot unbelievable and clunky.
I don't expect to win anyone over. There's no point trying to "win" an argument about it. But if there is actually going to be a proper discussion about a book or movie or whatever, then all viewpoints should be presented otherwise you end up with another mutual admiration society.

If you're talking morals, I agree, but facts actually are right or wrong. In saying that my opinion is "right", I'm saying it factually, not morally. Facts just aren't subjective.
I'm fresh out of bed and having a hard time explaining myself.

You mean made them fun and less boring?

(I jest!)

That reminds me.
Sometimes if I want to lodge my stance, but not really get involved in an argument - especially if I didn't read the book with the group but had read it sometimes in the past, so I might not be fresh with the details - sometimes I'll just be like, "I didn't like X because Y. Here's my review for more:"

This is the important thing to me. I did run across a situation where my use of a word was apparently different than others. In The Martian I said the humor was juvenile, but I meant that you would find a 7 year old using the same type of potty/anatomy humor. If I had said "childish" then I would have been judging it. But my hair splitting on words isn't always the same as other people. I've been much more careful since.
V.W. wrote: "What I find strange is that people seem to think that you can be argued into liking or disliking something contrary to what your own experience tells you...."
This boggles the mind!

You mean made them fun and less boring?
(I jest!)"
LOL

Yeah, I don't like the word juvenile. I even prefer the term Middle Grade for the 9-12 book range, though some places call that range Juvenile.
I know, rationally, that it can be used neutrally to describe an actual thing... but it seems often used with derision and has such baggage that I wince when I hear it, even if I'm saying it in a non-negative way.

The one time that I will take a very strong and black-and-white minded stance on a book is if it has a blatant agenda. Even if it's an agenda I agree with, there's something about twisting a story and it's characters all to fit in one tiny box of thought that's just kind of ugly to me. I'd classify that as a 'bad' book, not just one I didn't happen to enjoy.
If I do end up disagreeing, if the argument gets into a lengthy back-and-forth between myself and one other member, I'll try to shut it down nicely or just walk away. Nobody wants their book discussion to turn into a debate between two strangers.

If you're talking morals, I agree, but facts actually are right or wrong. In saying that my opinion is "right", I'm saying it factually, not morally. Facts just aren't subjective.
I'm fresh out of bed and having a hard time explaining myself. "
Maybe I'm being dense but I'm not following that.
There was a great exchange about truth versus facts in the TV show Northern Exposure, where Chris said that truth changes but facts don't. He used the example of Custer: "Hero or villain? Civilizer or agent of genocide? The truth slips and turns, facts remain the same."

The trick is to not accuse others of being wrong, but to state the contrary position as a personal opinion, which you're able to articulate beyond vague and emotive language like "it was stupid" or "it was immature" or "I hated it.""
This is key. I think people conflate the two, which confuses the issue.
I've also run into the issue where I've stated something that was clearly my opinion by using phrases such as "I think" and "in my view" and "for me" but people still don't pick up that these are merely different ways to say "in my opinion." And there's the larger point that context is king, so we can generally discern the difference between someone stating a fact (things a character does) versus an opinion (how that made us feel). Some folks can't comprehend that difference for some reason.
At that point I do kind of think the other person is stupid. If they act like an asshole, I will state that out loud. I'm Italian, and we view arguing as a full-contact sport. Every discussion is Thunderdome. So I'm always conscious of reining that in because most people aren't used to that. But it's nice to have that in my back pocket when the idiots present themselves. I loves me a good flame war.

This is what I mean, actually. Facts do remain the same; they're objective and have absolutely nothing to do with subjective opinion. Stating a "fact" about an opinion only works if you're talking about your own opinion. Stating an opinion is right/factual for other people is illogical.

Oh, we seem to be saying the same thing. I'm just saying that when people say they're "right" about a book they're treating it as "fact".

You mean made them fun and less boring?"


Heh - this reminds me of those lovely little things people say that they try to pass off as opinion but come across as condescending AF.
Like if you refer to a book as slow or boring, and their rejoinder is something like, "Well, yeah, this isn't a book for someone who needs to have constant action and explosions."
Or something like, "Well maybe you should stick to books like Twilight if this is too complex for you", insulting not just you, but also everyone who likes Twilight. (Which, well, fair enough... )
(I jest! Again!)


And I always keep rein on my temper and my opinions because even on the internet, we are all a part of a larger society of not only right and wrong, but also like and dislike. I can only say what I think not what everyone should think.

(I jest! Again!)..."
I'm one of those rare ones who loved Twilight. I am SO used to defending my opinion. :)
I actually stopped commenting in my classics group because people get so pissy. There was a serious argument during Matilda. Matilda, for God's sake!!! I haven't commented since. I love contrasting opinions but I'm not a fan of argument.

I'm completely with you on this. I don't have the time or the patience to deal with internet arguments. Or non-internet arguments either, for that matter. There was once a point in my life where that was different, but now it just feels like such a massive waste of time and energy.. I just can't do it.

I'm completely with you on this. I don't have the time or the patience to deal with internet arguments. Or non-inte..."
Same.
Once upon a time I used to get into a lot of philosophical debates online. I would enjoy - and sometimes get a bit of a rush - in dissecting a specious argument and pointing out the flaws and logical fallacies and factual errors...
But now I just find it kind of exhausting and pointless more often than not.


I'm one of those rare ones who loved Twilight. I am SO used to defending my opinion. :)"
Try hating the nearly universally-beloved Empire Strikes Back since 1980. That'll grant you one hundred percent flameproof armor plating just from sheer practice.

Reminds me of the saying: "I don't give a shit and I won't take any shit. I'm not in the shit business."


Yep.
I'll just go build my own pyre now, shall I? ..."


I was told by someone in the discussion that all my opinions on all things were now void...
I'll assume he was joking, for his sake...


I wouldn't disagree.


Books mentioned in this topic
The Swiss Family Robinson (other topics)The Swiss Family Robinson (other topics)
English as She Is Spoke (other topics)
Fifty Shades of Grey (other topics)
Matilda (other topics)
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