If, on the other hand, you're talking about unpublished short story writers all the way up to published novelists as a sort of hierarchy of where authors sit in the eyes of readers and publishers then, yes, up to point.
Because obviously, at some point, the author's name on its own is enough to sell a work. J. K. Rowling, Murakami Haruki etc. are obviously going to get more recognition, because they've proved that their writing works. Agents and publishers don't need to question "does this author know what they're doing?". They've already shown that they do.
The rest of us poor peasants have to prove that. Agents and publishers look at us with a more critical eye and evaluate us more harshly, because our intent isn't yet clear. If I write "eleventy-eleventh birthday", am I copying Tolkien, making a grammar mistake, or saying something of my own? That matters, because readers will ask the same question.
And it doesn't really help to think "everyone is stepping on my work". That's confusing ego with judgement. Yeah, at first, it feels like it's a rejection of you personally, but most of the time, it really isn't. You're competing with a thousand other people in the same space. No editor or publisher has the time, or interest, in judging you as a person.
So don't treat it like a personal judgement. Actually listen to what people are saying, and take it on board. And trust me, "they don't understand what I am doing" is very, very, rarely a valid conclusion. If they didn't, it's usually because you aren't making your intent, or your execution, clear enough. Sure, some people like doing that on social media, or book review sites, because it gets likes and attention. So what? This isn't about them. But understand that not everyone is going to universally praise you. Wreybies, from the OG, really dislikes one of my favourite authors, Stephen Donaldson. People are allowed to have opinions.