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Tansy Rayner Roberts

Posts Tagged ‘feminism’

Mothers, Authors and Milestones

Saturday, August 28th, 2010

I’ve spent a lot of the weekend so far reading the comments from this great blog post by Yarn Harlot, about the double standards inflicted on female vs. male parents, especially when it comes to travelling for work. It took me a little time to realise why I was particularly entranced by this feminist rant out of the many feminist rants I read each week – but of course, I have Aussiecon coming up, at which I will be trying to balance the needs of my family with the needs of my career, with an added bonus guilt portion that comes from the fact that the “needs of my career” also happens to be, you know, awesome fun times.

That, and I’ve been starting to think of the actual practicalities of going to Swancon next year on my own…

Anyway, the post is great but the comments are even better. I am delighted to hear so many women (and some men) being vocal about having “non-traditional” family and work arrangements, about the negotiations that go with balancing domestic and paid and family work, and acknowledging just how hard all this stuff is, even with partners who are pro-feminist and supportive.

Some other links that caught my eye over the last few days include Kate Elliott on Authoral Intent in which she sensibly lays out the role of the reader vs. the role of the writer in fiction, in a post which has sparked off some great recent conversations. I particularly enjoyed Sarah Rees Brennan’s response on Twitter a few days ago, where she laid out the various “stories” people read in her Demon series, depending on their priorities as a reader.

It reminded me very much of a dialogue that went around the blogs earlier in the year, about how the reader’s default vision of who characters are and what they look like can often outweigh not only the author’s intent, but the author’s own words. This is particularly the case where characters are often assumed to be white unless the author beats their non-whiteness over the heads of the readers – but I’m sure there are lots of other examples of this happening!

The “women authors speak out about male privilege in literary reviews” story continues to spread, with Jezebel doing a piece on it. Nicola Griffith weighs in with a post about Books and Girl Cooties, discussing how her own work has been packaged and marketed.

And finally, my mother Jilli made a rare appearance on the blogosphere this week, showing off her garden as part of the World Kitchen Garden Day held in the little town of Cygnet last weekend. Checkout her homemade milestone, a replica of the one that sits outside her home town in Lancashire, only with a lot more miles on the clock.

I have portals; I know things

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Gah, it’s been one of those days. The kind that makes you wish you had the kind of life where staying in bed all day was actually possible. Still, I have the recording of Galactic Suburbia tonight to cheer me up!

Over at the Voyager blog, I talk about my favourite fictional cities, and ask what your favourite SF/fantasy city is!

Someone on my LJ (hello anonymous person!) sent me an awesome link to this great “redesign Wonder Woman’s costume” art contest.

I also found (via @thirtysix on Twitter) a brilliant essay on the incidental misogyny in cyberspace, and the way that gaming businesses have failed their female customers. It’s an incredibly intelligent piece which includes a historical perspective on gaming & female characters in games, from the POV of a woman.

Over at Twelfth Planet Press, Alisa unveils two of the beautiful books she has coming out in time for Worldcon, with design by the ever talented Amanda Rainey: Bleed by Peter M. Ball (the sequel to the hugely successful fantasy noir Horn) and Glitter Rose, a boutique collection by Marianne de Pierres, the queen of Australian science fiction.

Weekend Linkage 03-07-10

Saturday, July 3rd, 2010

Am editing like a maniac, but a successful and productive maniac thanks to shipping one of my children off to play in a creek with her Glammer for the weekend.

When I’m not powering through my chapters, I have been reading:

Annalee Newitz over at io9 on how working women could change the future – a great piece of political & science fictional theory.

Jeff VanderMeer on anthologies from a reader’s POV

JJ of Uncreated Conscience talks about the re-jacketing of Cindy Pon’s historical Asian fantasy – which in paperback now looks like just another teen supernatural thriller without obvious cultural markers. JJ has written a balanced piece which looks at why such a compromise may be the best thing for the author, despite it being so very objectionable from an ethical standpoint.

Ari from Reading in Colour picks up on the same story, with alarm at how much power the few people who buy books for Barnes & Noble and Borders have over the entire publishing industry, and why this is bad news for diversity in fiction.

An in-depth discussion over at Shakesville looks at the bullying and harassment experienced by redheads, especially in British and Australian culture – the discussion is particularly readable for the way that the many (mostly American) participants who were previously unaware of this issue are so open to being educated about it, and it also looks at the way redheads are treated as exotic or comical figures in pop culture. A lot of anecdotal experience here which is quite powerful to read – though could be triggering to those who have experienced bullying or harassment.

Vonda MacIntyre on writing one of the first Star Trek tie in novels.

Oh, and it’s Big Finish Day! Until the end of Saturday, British time, the first 50 Doctor Who Big Finish audio plays are available for only 5 pounds each (including postage about AUS $11). If you’ve been meaning to check some of these out, now is the time! I can particularly recommend Storm Warning (the first 8th Doctor and Charley Pollard adventure) and Eye of the Scorpion (Peri and the 5th Doctor hook up with new companion the near-Pharoah Erimem).

Linkuosity

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

I’ve spent the day ripping central chapters out by their roots and replacing a whole bunch of madeyuppy rubbish with saner, cleaner, sexier narrative. It hurts, my brain, it hurts.

So all I can offer in the way of useful bloggage are some good things that other people have been writing:

Tehani interviews Malindo Lo (check out the Fablecroft blog for some other great interviews this week)

Kaaron Warren talks about getting ideas for endings, while Catherynne Valente talks about the importance of the opening paragraph

Why the Dove Movement is bad for your daughters (via Copperbadge/Sam Storyteller)

Stephanie Gunn responds to our latest (tenth!!!) Galactic Suburbia podcast, talking about her early experiences in reading genre.

A powerful post about what it can be like bringing a second baby into your family.

And Alisa has posted her list of Twelfth Planet Press eligible works and eligible artwork for the Ditmars that are currently open for nominations. This is convenient for me because all my eligible stories were published by Twelfth Planet Press!

That is:

“Like Us,” Shiny Issue 5 – short story
“Prosperine When It Sizzles,” New Ceres Nights – short story
Siren Beat – novelette

When my brain is together enough to sift through old recs posts I will put up a list of Australian stuff I liked in 2009! It seems so very long ago, doesn’t it?

In closing, Tehani pointed me at this announcement that 69 year old Wonder Woman has finally been allowed to swap the flag-bearing minidress/shorts for some sensible threads. I’m dubious about the Superman-style alternate version of her backstory, but I do like the mature, Black Canary style costume. And Issue 600 of her monthly comic (amazing what people will do to hang on to a franchise) is definitely something to be celebrated.

Prime Minister Gillard

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

Sure, it didn’t start out as a pretty day in politics, but by lunchtime I was pretty delighted with the end result.

I love that we have an unmarried, unreligious Prime Minister. I love that our new Prime Minister is smart and confident and strong and has a real knack for calling people out when they say something stupid (believe me, with Abbott around that’s going to be handy)

But I love, love love that when it came to it, the best person for the job of coming in and picking up the post-Rudd pieces happened to be a woman. I love that my daughters will not now be growing up in a country that has never had a female prime minister – that they will not remember a time that this seemed impossible. The world, and Australia, look a bit different today.

I told 5 year old Raeli that we had a female Prime Minister this afternoon and she was totally uninterested. That in itself was pretty fabulous – she saw nothing exceptional about the concept (when I first explained what a PM was to her, a few months ago, she reckoned I should do the job, possibly because of my exceptional bossing skills). But later, when she saw Julia on the news, she said “That’s the Prime Minister!” and a few moments later, “I LOVE the Prime Minister.”

That’s my girl.

Kudos to Kevin Rudd for all the good things he’s done during his time as PM. He achieved far more than simply not being John Howard, which was pretty much the minimum many of us expected of him for the first six months. (ahh the lack of Howard, it never gets old) One of the things this voter will always remember him fondly for is that he chose a strong, competent woman as his deputy, and put her in the position that allowed history to be made today.

Our new Prime Minister, Julia Gillard (nope, not bored with saying that yet) has proved so far that she’s tough enough to take the kind of shit that gets doled out to women who dare to advance in Australian politics. Good luck to her in the months ahead.

(if the Labor party could just ditch Conroy and all he stands for now, that would make my week)

Bullets, Bracelets & Candy – More of 1940′s Wonder Woman

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

The Wonder Woman Chronicles Vol. One contd.

Last time I pretty much just reviewed the first Wonder Woman comic, rather than the many stories that make up this collection and constitute most of the first year of Wonder Woman. In her second appearance in Sensation Comics, she successfully returns Steve Trevor to ‘man’s world’ in her invisible plane (which is never explained, though a later reference implies that every freaking Amazon has her own invisible plane – what the hell kind of island is it? Why do they need a fleet of invisible planes? They never go anywhere!

Once there, Diana’s weird instant obsession with Steve leads her to impersonate a nurse (she takes pains to explain to the audience that she is totally a trained nurse back home so it’s OKAY) and indeed to buy the identity of a nurse at the hospital who happens to look just like her and is also called Diana – Diana Prince! This floored me, as it’s an extremely dodgy piece of plotting, though kudos for trying to at least address the issue of how Diana could work for the US military without papers. Extra kudos also that the writer brough back the original Diana Prince before the year was out, showing ramifications for illicitly purchasing someone else’s identity. Ish.

Diana quickly gets herself transferred to military service as a secretary, once more obsessively following Steve Trevor, and is amusingly irritated not to get the job as his personal secretary, being as he already has one. She has to settle for being the secretary to his boss Colonel Darnell, and enters into an ongoing bitch-fight with Steve’s actual secretary Lila, often trying to actively poach her job from her. I really liked the treatment of Lila, who is set up as totally an ‘oh noes that wench is thwarting Diana and maybe she’s really an enemy spy’ kind of Girl Rival, but ultimately is just a not-entirely-friendly young woman trying to do her job. Diana, quite frankly, deserves to be thwarted a bit in her mad pursuit of Steve Trevor.

I very much liked the storyline in which Diana suspects Lila of being an enemy agent, and is proved wrong – and indeed that the real spy, a young girl who had been forced into the situation, is given a chance to redeem herself. This seems to be an ongoing theme of Wonder Woman not only catching “bad guys” (or rather, gals) but also understanding motivations for bad behaviour and often attempting to help them out of dire situations.

It’s also kind of awesome that there are so many female characters – and so many different kinds of women – front and center in this first year of comics. The main ongoing villainess, Baroness Paula, is appealing and appalling in equal measures, and serves quite well as a nemesis. There is commentary on the different roles of women at the time – from military servicewomen to housewives, and of course there is the occasional return to Themyscira and the Amazons. With their kangas.

One of the most important things I have learned about Wonder Woman’s heritage from these comics is that the Amazons ride giant steeds called ‘kangas’ as their rodeo steeds, that appear to be giant kangaroos. Yes, really. Once you’ve seen that on a cover image you really don’t forget it in a hurry.

Then there’s Etta Candy, Diana and Wonder Woman’s best friend and fabulous sidekick. I wasn’t sure what to think of Etta at first. She seemed like an alarming fat joke who had bounced her way out of an Archie Comic or something. But once I got used to her, and read up a bit on her history, I grew rather fond.

Etta appears seemingly out of nowhere – she met Diana off camera during the very brief ‘nurse’ period – and is interchangeably pally with both Diana and Wonder Woman. She is large, proud and unapologetic, which is rather enjoyable once you get past the ‘woo woo!’ catch phrase and the fact that she is constantly eating candy, even during action scenes. Mostly because – she gets action scenes! Etta hails from Holliday College (embarrassingly I read this as ‘holiday college’ for the whole collection and kept wondering what that was supposed to mean and how it was different from ‘real college’) and she and her sorority sisters always turn up when Diana or her alter ego need assistance from a mob. Etta battles at Wonder Woman’s side, sends and receives “telegraphic radio messages” and is basically funny and brave throughout the adventures, proving to be far more than the comic relief character she seems to be.

Apparently later versions of Etta Candy were far more self-doubting and wracked with insecurities about her weight and so on, and the fun-loving sorority girl was replaced by a military officer who wished she could lose the pounds (though scored Steve Trevor for herself in a reboot that thankfully erased he and Diana’s appallingly artificial love story – not that he’s much of a prize!). It’s interesting that Etta could only be unapologetic about her fatness in these early years and that for the most part, it’s not seen as something that makes her unattractive to men or lesser as a person. There is one awkward scene in which Diana thinsplains to her friend about how “hoarding during war is unpatriotic – even fat!” and urges her to lose weight so men will enjoy looking at her more. Etta is unconvinced, but eventually loses 10 pounds, decides she doesn’t like it, and takes back her candy. While her portrayal is problematic in some ways, it’s so rare to see a fat person in comics at all, and I love that she is allowed to be heroic and attractive to the opposite sex, and to enjoy her figure without agonising about it. In this decade, anyway!

I haven’t mentioned Steve this time around, mostly because Narelle informed me that a reboot got rid of the Steve Trevor problem later on by making he and Diana simply not fall in love. Anything would be better than the constant refrain of “Oh don’t give me the credit, Colonel, it was all my wonderful angel, Wonder Woman” as he takes on promotions and other rewards, and treats secretary Diana like dirt. Boring.

Diana’s lasso is introduced relatively late in the piece, six months after the introduction of her character. I liked the story which shows her mother fashioning the lasso from the famous girdle once stolen by Hercules, and also the hints at what Diana has left behind – her friends, her culture, her favourite kanga. Within a month, though, the first proper “Wonder Woman” title had been released, and her backstory had been rewritten for the first time. In this version, the lasso was gifted to her right at the beginning, with her costume.

There’s one element that is common to most of Wonder Woman’s stories – bondage. I’d heard a rumour that in fact this was a deliberate element introduced into her storylines, and formed a part of her initial character, and searching on the internet I found this article which seems to confirm that. William Moulton Marston, the writer and creator of Wonder Woman, was a clinical and consulting psychologist who had some rather odd ideas about matriarchy and feminism, and introduced a strong dynamic into Wonder Woman that suggested women were more caring and gentle than men, and ultimately could conquer them through sexual submission. Or something. He also liked it when Wonder Woman was chained up.

Rather disturbingly, Wonder Woman herself also seems to enjoy anything to do with chains – they bring out a gleeful delight in her, mostly because she believes it’s great fun to break them. Indeed her early adventures as a costumed superhero – something which seems to happen mostly by accident – come about because of her sense of silly fun. She also enjoys it when people shoot at her, because she is the champion at the game “bullets and bracelets” back home, and it’s fun to practice. One story reasonably early on shows the danger of Diana’s casual attitude to lesser people trying to do violence to her – she allows a villain to attach chains to her actual bracelets, thinking she will easily free herself, only to remember that in fact doing so robs her of her powers!

This is something which I think is changed in later comics – in the early stories, Diana’s great powers are conferred through her bracelets and other toys, not through any innate superpowers, though she is very highly trained as proved by her regularly beating all the other Amazons at their reindeer games. Having said that, by the time of the first official Wonder Woman comic, there are suggestions that she had unnatural strength since childhood.

Overally I really enjoyed reading these early comics – it’s very cool to see where the character comes from, and to get a sense of the history. There is a genuineness to the stories that allows me to bite my tongue about a lot of the problematic elements therein and I found the 1940′s genderwince a lot less painful than the 1960′s genderwince. The design of the old comics is lovely, particularly Diana herself with her strong body, reasonably modest costume (ruffled shorts! Later smoothed out, but still so much more dignified than the scanty swimsuit she wears these days) and frankly awesome hair. I also really enjoy the design of the prim and proper “Diana” and some of my favourite stories were those when she uses this identity to fight crime. The wartime storylines were the elements of most interest to me, as a form of social history – the story about the price fixing of milk and the effect of that on the country’s children was a lot more intense and interesting than all the spy stuff, to me! I also liked that characters made regular reappearances, giving a sense of a real continuous world.

Apparently Marston wrote WW until his death, only 5 years after he created her – but he left a coda in his will allowing DC to have ownership of the character for as long as they were publishing her comic. As soon as they stopped, ownership would revert to his estate. And that, quite simply, is the reason why Wonder Woman is one of the longest running comics in history!

You Should Read This! Right Now. I’ll wait.

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

I’m getting a little tired of lists and books and blog posts and articles and even blog comments by people telling me what I should be reading. I’m even getting tired of all of the above telling other people what they should be reading. Worst of all, sometimes I catch myself doing it, and then I have to roll my eyes at myself, and that’s just a waste of everyone’s time.

This isn’t, by the way, aimed at any one individual. I don’t blame anyone who has done it, because quite frankly we’ve all done it. I’m railing more against something in the SF community culture (and indeed the larger culture of book readers) which has supported and enabled the bad habit of telling people what they SHOULD be reading. I was inspired to write this by the recent SF Signal Mind Meld (which asks which anthologies SHOULD be on someone’s shelf)

Now, I’m all for recommending books. Recommending books people might like is like meat and drink to me. I rec therefore I am. But the older I get, the more annoyed I become at being told that I SHOULD do anything, especially something that is going to take up a lot of my time. It’s particularly annoying when it’s a ‘should’ aimed at a general audience because book recommendations are actually quite personal things. There are no ten books that SHOULD be on everyone’s shelf. The ten books I wouldn’t be without are going to be completely different to anyone else’s.

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Galactic Suburbia Episode 7 Show Notes

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

Galactic Suburbia Episode 7 is now live! (that is, you can play it on the website and it’s up on iTunes, the download should be available by tonight our time) In this episode we welcome our first special guest to the show, editor and anthologist Jonathan Strahan. Jonathan is the Locus Reviews Editor. He is a three time Hugo Award nominee and Locus, Aurealis, Ditmar, Peter McNamara, and William J Atheling Jr award winning editor of nearly fifty books. His most recent books include Legends of Australian Fantasy and Swords and Dark Magic. Coming up are Godlike Machines and Engineering Infinity.

Check out our show notes below!

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Giants and Superstars

Monday, May 17th, 2010

Farah Mendelsohn linked to a post announcing a new book of important reprints in our field:

“Long before they were household names, all of the superstar science fiction and fantasy authors in this anthology were just fans with stories and dreams. Now, for the first time ever, fifteen of the genre’s most important authors have come together to show off their first published SF stories, many of them rare and never before collected… An invaluable look at the origins of speculative fiction’s greatest minds, and bursting with insightful advice for beginning writers, this book is a must for any science fiction or fantasy fan, aspiring author, or teacher.”

Sounds good, doesn’t it? But then take a look at oh hell yes here we are talking about tables of contents again and what do we find?

Fourteen men, one woman.

While Nicola Griffith is a very important writer in our field, it’s hard not to start pouring forth with all the obvious female names that are not included. And sure, there are many reasons why an author might not be included in a book like this, rights management being a big one, and sure, there are plenty of male authors who are not included, but…

One woman. Fourteen men.

This is a book that holds itself up as a document, as a teaching aid, as a resource to teach us something about the genre of science fiction. So far what it’s taught me is that women continue to be unvalued.

As Farah says, it’s shameful. It’s also disappointing. Is it really that hard to remember that if you are telling the story of science fiction, you are going to be held accountable for the story you choose to tell?

A Question of Canon-Building

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

In our most recent episode of Galactic Suburbia, Alisa pointed us towards this Mind Meld post that asked a variety of people which 10 SF books should be part of every fan’s library. Alisa noted that while the women asked this question generally mentioned books from a variety of authors, and more than one female writer especially, no man asked in this first part included more than one book by a woman – and that book was always Ursula Le Guin’s The Left Hand of Darkness.

While this does point towards the incredible success and popularity of that particular text as a SF classic, it was both interesting and concerning that there was still such imbalance. This led to all kinds of discussion, not only in the podcast, but across Twitter, about the usefulness of these kinds of top 10 lists, and how they could be used to construct an “agreed-upon canon.”

Jonathan Strahan expanded upon his own thoughts on the matter in this audio-post, looking more closely at the terms of definition implied by the question, on the fun and problematic nature of canon-building, and in fact why he doesn’t like the concept of making such lists.

I agree with Jonathan that discussions of canonicity (hmm, is that a word?) are best done without formal structures or restrictions such as those lists offer. While lists (and I include awards shortlists here as well as top 10 list) do provoke conversations, inevitably those conversations tend to be negative rather than positive, and I think that’s a shame – so many people respond to a list by saying what was overlooked or left off! Which of course is utterly valid, but not entirely fair when the list is the choice of an individual. Having said that, I am disappointed at the lack of women that men have chosen to recommend in this forum, and that the exception to this is always the same woman and the same single work is intriguing. Certainly, the women in the experiment had no trouble coming up with multiple works by women which they considered significant!

(I have to admit that I get just as outraged as anyone when my favourite is not on a list, especially a list of key importance, though I do my best not to use the word ‘overlooked’ as it suggests the person making the list made a mistake rather than, you know, asserting their actual opinion)

I do think lists have a value in more than just provoking people to complain about what isn’t on them. The Mind Meld system is excellent in that it is asking a variety of people to comment and suggest works, rather than for instance trying to compose a single list from the various top 10s… had they done that, chances are very likely that The Left Hand of Darkness would have been very high up the single list, but also that it might have been the only work by a woman recommended at all.

This is why I find shortlists more interesting than who won the award (though winning awards is lovely), and collections of lists more interesting than single lists. The more people are consulted, and the more works they are able to reference, the more likely you are to find diversity and range in recommendations.

As soon as lists become restricted, you see fewer women on them. Many people complained about the Best Picture award of the Oscars this year having a shortlist of 10, but I liked it. The longer shortlists are, the more likely they are to reflect the whole range of excellent work produced in a single year. I know I used to get terribly frustrated when judging awards that the maximum number for a shortlist was 5 – sometimes there really are 7 excellent works in a year, and you want to talk about all of them!

Whenever people discusscanon, about what is in the canon and what should be in the canon, I always start feeling scratchy and uncomfortable. Because this leads into discussion about what books are ‘important’ and somehow that usually turns into a conversation about white men, all over again.

Jonathan suggested that with a top 10 list, people might have a tendency to look at which authors should be represented, rather than starting with the books: “okay, I have to have a Heinlein, and and Asimov, and… and…” which leads them to be celebrity-heavy. I think that’s true and also true that, as Alisa said in our podcast, with a list of 10, no one really has to look beyond the white men. The problem is figuring out which books to leave out, of those that first come to mind. There are few women whose names resonate to the majority of SF fans with the same power as Heinlein, Asimov, Clarke, Leiber, Dick, Pohl, Haldeman, Gibson, and so on. Which is not to say that their work is inferior, merely that their names do not carry the same star power. As Alisa has been saying a lot lately, our perceptions of how important an author are skewed by many factors: publisher support, awards, how memorable they are, and word of mouth. We’re still coming out of a time when the majority of opinions voiced about SF were those of male critics and readers, and that is bound to have an effect for many decades to come. Things are changing on that score, but slowly. I really liked that Jonathan, in his audio post, cited several works by women that would “tell the same story” as the iconic male-authored SF works by men, but sadly it rarely works out that way when most male readers are asked which books are important. Few people going to stop and think about which women contributed to early cyberpunk when they can just write down “Neuromancer” and move on.

My list, should I make one, of books which an SF fan should have in their library, would be almost entirely packed with feminist SF. Not because I would be wanting to make a statement, though statements are awesome things, but because that is my SF. I have read my share of the classics, and even appreciated many of them. If pressed, I could cite Starship Troopers or Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep or The Forever War, and I would acknowledge that most people should read Neuromancer at least once, though I liked Pattern Recognition a lot better…

But.

My science fiction fandom, my explorations of the genre, the parts of SF that really made me excited, aren’t about those books. My science fiction is the Women of Wonder anthologies, and the Tiptree Award history as told through their fundraising anthologies, and Women of Other Worlds, and more recently On Joanna Russ. My science fiction is Larbalestier and Mendelsohn and Merrick’s works of feminist SF history and criticism. My science fiction is Connie Willis and Lois McMaster Bujold.

My canon is “The Heat-Death of the Universe” and “The Ship Who Sang” and “What Men Don’t See” and “What I didn’t See” and “Rachel in Love.”

I mentioned on Twitter that my list of 10 would probably be all feminist SF and Jonathan pointed out that the question asked for general SF, not feminist SF. Which is true enough… But I’m sure no one who answered with 10 cyberpunk or space opera or “hard” SF titles would feel self-conscious about it. My SF is feminist SF, the two are intertwined for me, and I can sympathise with those men who answered the Mind Meld with mostly male authors, because I really would struggle to keep the male-authored books on there when I had so many great women that, quite frankly, every fan should have in their libraries.

Even then I know that my list would be lacking, because I just haven’t done well enough yet in reading SF by people of colour. Octavia Butler and Samuel Delaney are there on my list of authors to educate myself about, once I’m done with all this Joanna Russ, but they still leave a gaping hole in my education. I haven’t decided which of the two will be my Classic Author Obsession of 2011, and would be interested to hear from anyone as to which works of either of them I should start with! With Delaney I’m particularly interested in the ways that his work intersected with so much of the feminist SF of the 70′s, as most of what I’ve heard about him has been in relation to Russ or Tiptree. I’m also wondering if I should start with the new book that is due out shortly I think, or start back with his early work.

Ironically, at the end of all this, I’ve never personally been that excited by much of novel-length written by Ursula Le Guin. I am, however, very glad that a woman has written a book that so many people still consider vital and interesting and important, so many decades later. She wouldn’t have been on my mythical list of 10, but I think it’s awesome she is in so many other people’s.

No one person can read or love or recommend everything, and we’re all limited by our own biases and personal tastes.

All this goes to show I think is that if you are going to do something like the Mind Meld, the key is to ask as diverse a range of people as possible, in order that their answers also add diversity to what is considered “canon”. I think they did pretty well with that – after all it matters less that the men thought of including more than one female author when you have women whose opinions are also being sought, and ultimately a good range of works were recommended. I look forward to seeing what other works are discussed in the second post on this topic.

EDIT: I didn’t manage to articulate this on the first pass, but I think it’s important to note that the word ‘canon’ has quite negative connotations for anyone who has ever taken much of an interest in the way that female authors intersect with the history of literature. I know that my first gut reaction to the concept of canon building is along the lines of “something else to exclude Jane Austen from, then.” This is a big reason why I appreciate the acknowledgement of Mary Shelley’s contribution to the development of SF as a genre, every single time.

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