April 2011

SF/F Commentary

A Science Fiction Thesis Fragment: Some Tobias Buckell Love

I have been inspired by a friend to post something from my academic work in hopes that it will bore you to tears.  Then again, the fragment I plan to post is about science fiction; more particularly, it’s about the work of Tobias Buckell, who I spent half of my thesis talking about. Here you go: The cultural and racial fragmentation of the postcolony perhaps highlights the liberative potential of outer space precisely because cultural ownership has been a particularly problematic notion in the postcolony—the European fragment, as I‘ve already pointed out, continuously attempts to (re)formulate itself as the center of knowledge, which makes attempts to separate oneself difficult in the geographically limited Earth. In Ragamuffin, this is made possible by two spatial orientations: the first is the positing of Caribbean peoples as the last, real threat to the Satrapy, making them no longer the secondary figures they had been formerly in a world dominated by western politics. The second is in the flourishing of human ingenuity in Caribbean spaces, where they are able to not only break themselves from the hold of the Satrapy, but also from a wider postcolonial past. These ideas are interwoven throughout the novel, represented best by the character of Nashara. She is a prime example of human ingenuity at work, since her very biology has been rewritten as threat to the Satrapy and its allies. She has sacrificed her womb in order to become a digital bomb capable of self-replicating over the lamina (a kind of super information network that connects ships together). In so doing, she ceases to be fully human, quickly becoming a series of digital copies; but it also means that she is representative of what the opening of geographical space has achieved for her people (Buckell 105). They are no longer contained in small, resource dependent islands, but on worlds of their own. Chimson is one such world: “We took Chimson from them with our bare hands,”Nashara said. “And even though they shut us away from the rest of humanity, it was still a glorious thing….You should see what ideas and people flourished as we all jammed together. It must have been like Earth before the pacification, with all those billions of minds so close together.” (Buckell 30) The Satrapy‘s pension for cutting off its problematic group subjects like diseased limbs, however, proves to be their undoing; it is only through containment that the people of Chimson are able to grow. This process also mirrors the isolationist—or, perhaps, isolation-izing—policies of the old history, which colonialists used not only to limit the potential for aggression and resistance against colonial power—through aggression, imprisonment, and even abandonment—but also to enact economic warfare against indigenous and even former colonial powers—primarily through capitalist exploitation models. It also signals a wider deprivationary political process through which prison camps, serfdom, deportation, and other legal frames are used to deny access to the opening offered by greater access to geographic space (Gottmann 117). But much as galactic empires and even spaceships are defamiliarized spaces or objects, the notion of containment on a planetary scale within Ragamuffin signals the (post)colonial past through radical expansion amidst radical reduction, defamiliarizing our perceptions of the past and present while at the same time embedding their symbols and signals within an imaginary landscape. Because ―access to physical space is at the foundation of all [regulation] of human behavior,‖ the containment of that space determines an individual‘s freedom (Gottmann 117). For postcolonial peoples, space is undeniably central to interaction: ―location is causally significant; it shapes our experiences and our ways of knowing‖ and ―limits the possibilities available to us, since it helps frame our choices by organizing the habitual patterns through which we perceive ourselves and our world‖ (Mohanty 110). Buckell, however, presents a narrative which disentangles the problematics of ownership in a (post)colonialist world by changing the very dynamics under which such a system functions: the people of Chimson are not stripped of their land, but are instead subjugated or denied access to the enlarged (interstellar) colonial system (Satrapic space). The location, then, is one which has already begun severing the lines of an underlying colonialism which informs the social stratification of the novel. Don’t say I never gave you nothing.  Feel free to lambaste me with your criticisms in the comments. P.S.:  My thesis has been accepted and I should have one of those MA degrees shortly.  I am quite excited to mount that sucker on my wall, after which I will bother you with pictures of my degrees.  Why?  Because I’m egotistical like that.  Deal with it.

SF/F Commentary

Budgetary Woes: The Crazy World of Grad School and My Stupid Ideas

(This post is a temporary aside.  Don’t worry.  You’ll have science fiction and fantasy nonsense again soon.  I promise.  Three manga reviews are coming up, plus my thoughts on the first three episodes of A Game of Thrones from HBO will hit the waves next week.  For now, enjoy this random nonsense about my life.) I am an occasional idiot, depending on who you ask (some might say I’m a frequent idiot, but that’s really not relevant to this post).  Graduate school has taught me a number of rather amusing things:  the value of green tea, good conversation, and budgeting.  It’s the last of these that has me rather perplexed this summer, since I, in fact, did a piss poor job of budgeting, leaving me in a rather compromised position for July.  The issue isn’t that I won’t have enough money, just that I won’t have it in time.  It’s a fun predicament.  I’d love to tell you all about how we grad students don’t get paid much, but you already know that, either because you are a grad student, you’ve been one, or you have friends who are or have been. But I don’t want to get into that.  The purpose of this post is to lambaste you all with my ridiculous get-rich-quick schemes, after which you are free to say “yeah, that’s dumb” and “don’t do it.” The ideas are as follows (after the fold): Convert The World in the Satin Bag into an ebook and sell it on all the ebook sites for $0.99 The problem?  It’s an old book.  It’s a rough book.  And should I really be selling fiction to make money?  Probably not, but there it is. Place some short fiction on this blog and ask for donations I’ve thought of doing something along these lines recently, but not necessarily for monetary reasons (see the previous idea too).  Something tells me that a lot of you would like to actually see my short fiction, since some of it is supposed to be quite good.  It’s also started to feel rather ridiculous to me to offer up my fiction to publications that pay next to nothing when I have a larger audience built in here who might give me their time, comments, and (maybe) money.  But that’s also a side issue, I suppose.  The idea still stands, though.  I have a blog.  I have you folks who read this, and maybe you all would like to read the things I write and give me a buck if you like it.  No? Get a part time job Lucky me, there is a job at the local Books-A-Million that I am qualified for.  Working in a bookstore you say?  I’ve never done it, and I love books.  Oddly enough, Books-A-Million actually asks if you read, unlike some stores that shall remain nameless. Sell my soul to a Tytherian warlord Why not, right?  They’re buff, hairy, full of spunk, and in good need of souls so they can wield unspeakable magic and what not. And that’s it.  I’ve got nothing else in my repertoire, beyond attempting to make something of my freelance career.  The problem with the first two is, as I’ve pointed out, that it feels somewhat wrong to want to place fiction on this blog or in stores with the express purpose of earning money.  It’s also a rather dumb idea when you get right down to it.  Very few people actually make money selling fiction, but I’ve got a lot of great stories in my story folder and the first thing that popped in my head was to put it up here and see what would happen. But let’s face it, I’m probably going to try to get that part time job, because it’s in a bookstore and I like books.  What do you think?

SF/F Commentary

The Skiffy and Fanty Show #3.4 is Live! (Brain Batteries and Star Wars Sexism)

A new episode with an amusing topic:  brain batteries, FBI blunders, and the oddness of the representations of women in the Star Wars universe.  We share a few laughs, shed a few tears, and generally have a good time. Feel free to check out the episode! Also:  help us pick the next Torture Cinema movie; if you haven’t voted already, please do so here.  You’ll be torturing us for your own amusement.  We promise!

SF/F Commentary

Mr. Library: What Have You Got Checked Out?

We all know that libraries are under attack these days, and I intend to do my part to show their importance by checking out books (because I have some delusion that using the library is somehow recorded and then sent to evil government people who are forced to reconsider cutting library funds because people actually use the library). Here’s what I currently have checked out:  Ernest Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises (DVD) Ghostbusters (DVD)(it was awesome) Once Upon a Time in the West (DVD) Mythologies by Roland Barthes Globalization and Utopia:  Critical Essays edited by Patrick Hayden and Chamsy el-Ojeili The Search For Philip K. Dick by Anne R. Dick A Companion to The Crying of Lot 49 by J. Kerry Grant A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway Alone Against Tomorrow:  Stories of Alienation and Speculative Fiction by Harlan Ellison American War Poetry:  An Anthology edited by Lorrie Goldensohn Carrying the Darkness:  the Poetry of the Vietnam War edited by W. D. Ehrhart The Crying of Lot 49 by Thomas Pynchon Postmodern American Poetry:  a Norton Anthology edited by Paul Hoover The Postmoderns:  the New American Poetry Revised edited by Donald Allen The Sunset Limited:  a Novel in Dramatic Form by Cormac McCarthy The Complete Short Stories of Ernest Hemingway A History of Literary Criticism:  from Plato to the Present by M. A. R. Habib Nanyo-Orientalism:  Japanese Representations of the Pacific by Naoto Sudo Teaching Literature by Elaine Showalter That’s one hell of a list, don’t you think?  I had others checked out a few weeks ago, but decided to return them.  I’m hoping to work through most of these this month.  You won’t hear anything about them, though, since most of them aren’t of interest to you all (postmodern poetry is hardly SF/F). In the interest of prying into your lives, though, I want to know what books you currently have checked out from the library.  Family’s count (I’m looking at you, Jen)!

SF/F Commentary

Adam’s First Pro-Sale — “Resolution” — Congrats, Buddy!

In the interest in plugging things for friends, I would like to point you all to my friend Adam’s first ever pro publication over at AE!  The story is called “Resolution,” the publication of which Adam has to thank me, since I critiqued the hell out of it.  Or maybe I’m exaggerating my involvement… In any case, check out the story and let Adam know what you think on his blog! Congrats, man!

SF/F Commentary

Genre Walking: The Science Fiction and Fantasy Walkers and Joggers Club!

Genre Walking started on Twitter with Jason Sanford and Fabio Fernandes.  One of them responded to a tweet I put up about the amount of walking I’ve done since keeping track on April 8th; moments later, we had an idea:  let’s create a little group of SF/F folks who are walking, jogging, or running and track how many miles we’re doing.  Think of it like those “green on campus” movements where faculty and students try to carpool, use the bus, and walk instead of driving by themselves. The cool thing about Genre Walking, though, is that anyone can join.  And it’s easy.  All you have to do is say “I’m in” on this blog, on my Twitter account, or with the #genrewalking hashtag on Twitter.  Then:  record your miles!  And how do you do that?  On our handy dandy Genre Walking entry form!  It’s that simple. If you want to see how everyone is doing, you can go here.  I’ll add names to the side list as they become available. Now get your butt out the door and start walking!

Scroll to Top