Correira is precisely the kind of person who does not understand things like what structural inequality looks like in action, why trigger warnings were developed and will resist efforts to talk about this calmly and accurately for as long as he can. His blog as a whole reflects that ethos again and again.
Look at this one:
http://monsterhunter...enge-a-fisking/
He puts up garbage take after garbage take in critiquing a post by KT Bradford about getting beyond the "straight white author" pervasion in literature. He attacks Bradford's very position to challenge herself, charges her with reverse racism, assumes that she is furiously anti-male and anti-Larry Correira in what she is saying and demonizes her as a "SJW".
Look at this one too:
http://monsterhunter...sts-on-twitter/
His grasp of history and context is nearly as bad as the buffoons he chooses to argue with on Twitter. There are several discussions here on this very board that dig into pieces of history and present day realities that he inaccurately and disingenuously sums up to push his perspective on life. When he said "Democrats" were THE barrier to fixing the problems left behind by slavery and slavery's formal abolition, that is so incomplete and wrong of an answer as to leave me breathless. This guy does not understand and he won't do anything to challenge his (very wrong) viewpoints on these subjects. Some of them are even easy things to do. He won't read Ta-Nehisi Coates's articles on redlining and systemic inequality, he probably will not consume any media or histories that get into the meat of "why" things happened the way they did in American history regarding slavery, black people and so on. He probably won't admit that the political groups behind the Southern Democrats of the 1950s and 1960s largely morphed into the Republicans of today, probably has garbage fire takes on policing and so on. Arguing badly with people on Twitter is about as far as he's going to take this.
His rambling "About Me" shows a history of struggle to make it out of some deep poverty and rough situations. It also shows a very, very selective viewpoint that actually goes as far as to discount the existence of racism in the American South (particularly Alabama) among other things that start to aggregate into a passage loaded with keywords and phrases that have a cumulative effect of being dogwhistle language. His stated political viewpoints are pretty bad. Bad enough to make me not want to read his work. So, he might be right in a roundabout way saying that his politics are one reason behind his exclusion.
Sure, the Sad Puppies thing sounds like a decent idea to break up a very small "club" of voters. But it isn't being just that one thing. The people have banded together to become bullies, to purposefully attack and minimize others, to slowly devalue the nature of social and institutional criticism and more. Sad Puppies has mutated beyond the original purposes the group had and the people leading it are trash in so many ways.
I have not read his books, but Larry Correira is an unrepentant holder of garbage dump fire level attitudes about things and that will keep me from paying money to his publishers and reading his books. He claims he isn't a racist or a sexist, but he shows strong patterns of flinging huge percentages of his criticisms at women, flings them at people of color and flings them heaviest at those who are both because they in particular are who sets him off, rather than what they say.
The Hugos have structural problems in the judging, as does publishing/media content production in general. GRRM admits their existence, talks about progress in empowering women, minorities and the development of a true meritocratic awards panel over recent years and GRRM shows us the opening of the voting to those who pay $40 and nominate things is part of a process designed to address the problems.
The problem with GoodReads awards is that yes, thousands of people will vote for Divergent being amazing. But that doesn't mean it's qualitatively better than other books that more selective and experienced people will read. For awards to really matter to me, I think that there has to be a judges' panel and those judges have to be well read, experienced and trusted with recognizing quality in disparate forms. I lean more towards the Hugos (although I don't actually follow Hugo nominations for ToReadPile additions) than I do quickly crowd-sourced awards.
Too Long. Didn't Read summary: Larry Correira spews out garbage takes constantly due to awful grasps of history/personal politics/joy found in disrespecting other people. Discount him and those who've taken up the Sad Puppy cause.
This post has been edited by amphibian: 13 April 2015 - 08:35 PM
I survived the Permian and all I got was this t-shirt.