The book opens with Rand’s principled refusal to torture Semirhage, one of the Forsaken. You can’t accuse a series that’s twenty years in the making of direct political allegory—but surely there’s a comment…
That was in my mind, certainly. The Wheel of Time has always actually had quite an interesting relationship with political allegory. There was an article in the New York Times [I think this one —JBJ] a number of years ago talking about the Wheel of Time as a manifestation of interesting things that were happening in the world, which I think is fascinating. One of the reasons we like fantasy as writers is because fantasy is, at its very core, inherently representative. It is metaphorical. It is fantastical. It’s wonderful to be able to write something that is so fantastical and use the threads of true personality, of characterization, of people that you sympathize with, to anchor it in the real world at the same time. So that was running through my mind. I didn’t sit down and say, “I’m going to write a political allegory.” And yet these concepts were so big in our culture at the time that they did influence me. In these scenes—it’s even more interesting because I was working with direct comments from Robert Jordan in his notes mixed with things that had been said about Rand previously and trying to show both sides of the situation.
Robert Jordan had an interesting quote on this once. The interviewer asked him, “What are you trying to say with your stories? What are you trying to teach?” Robert Jordan took exception to that, and said: I am not trying specifically to teach anything. What he said, and the exact quote is something along these lines: “I love it when my books ask questions, but I don’t want to give the answers. The answers are yours. My job is to ask the questions.” And I see that. For many years I’ve thought that was a brilliant and poignant thing to say, and have used that as a guide in my own writing. I don’t want to give you answers. I want to raise issues and have characters struggle with them, because that’s what people do, and that’s what we [as writers] do. But I’m not sitting down to say, I am going to tell you what is right and what is wrong. I’m going to show you that there are characters who have a belief in what is right and what is wrong, and you can agree or disagree with them. But, like real people, they have views on these issues. I’m not trying to say anything specific; I’m only reacting, I think, in part to what we’re all saying, part of the cultural dialogue.
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