July 2012

SF/F Commentary

My PhD Reading List — For the Exams of Doom

Obviously, I’m in this thing called a PhD program.  In English (not Creative Writing).  And that means I have to take a series of exams (half written component and half oral).  As such, it’s necessary for me to have a reading list of primary and secondary texts (in my case, literature for the primary and theory/history/architecture for the secondary — some English majors do it the other way around). Before I give you the list, it might be important to tell you want I’m doing.  I am studying the spatial organization of empire in the Caribbean.  In other words, I want to know how empires constructed themselves as physical and social spaces and how that reflects in the literature of Caribbean peoples.  That’s the short version anyway. Now for the list: Novels (Early Period) The English in the West Indies, Or, the Bow of Ulysses by James Anthony Froude (1888) Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands by Mary Seacole (1857) Rupert Gray, a Study in Black and White by Stephen N. Cobham (1907) Emmanuel Appadocca by Michel Maxwell Philip (1854) (Modern and Mid-20th Century) Minty Alley by C. L. R. James (1936) A Morning at the Office by Edgar Mittelholzer (1950) Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys (1966) Brother Man by Roger Mais (1954) (Contemporary) The Enigma of Arrival by V. S. Naipaul (1987) Frangipani House by Beryl Gilroy (1986) Cambridge by Caryl Phillips (1991) A Map to the Door of No Return:  Notes to Belonging by Dionne Brand (2004) (Genre and Related Contemporary) Crystal Rain by Tobias S. Buckell (2006) Ragamuffin by Tobias S. Buckell (2007) Sly Mongoose by Tobias S. Buckell (2008)(note:  there is a fourth book coming out in this series, which I may add to this list at a later time) Midnight Robber by Nalo Hopkinson (2000) Redemption in Indigo by Karen Lord (2010) Theory, History, etc. (Spatial Theory) The Production of Space by Henri Lefebvre The Urban Experience by David Harvey The Road to Botany Bay:  An Essay in Spatial History by Paul Carter The Archaeologies of the Future by Fredric Jameson The Poetics of Space by Gaston Bachelard (Caribbean History, Postcolonial Theory, etc.) Writing in Limbo by Simon Gikandi Poetics of Relation by Edouard Glissant The Repeating Island:  the Caribbean and the Postmodern Perspective by Rojo Antonio Benitez The Pleasures of Exile by George Lamming The British Caribbean:  From the Decline of Colonialism to the End of Federation by Elisabeth Wallace Yards in the City of Kingston by Erna Brodber ———————————————— Any suggested additions?

SF/F Commentary

Top 5 SF/F Shows I Wish Weren’t Cancelled

Too many TV shows have come and gone.  Some of them never should have been killed.  These are the five I wish hadn’t been cancelled. In no particular order: Firefly (2002-2003) Need I explain why?  Browncoats are everywhere.  They are one.  They are vocal.  They are legion.  And if they all had $10,000,000,000,000, they’d bring back Firefly in a heartbeat.  For 10,000 seasons.  They’d probably clone Nathan Fillion and the rest of the cast just to keep it all going.  You know I speak the truth. But in all seriousness, who didn’t love Firefly?  To be fair, I didn’t get to watch the show on TV.  I came to it through the DVDs after hearing all the hype.  And now I regret not having added myself to the ratings.  It’s such an endearing show with a wonderful cast of characters.  With a lot of potential!  But it’s gone, and now we have to dream about what might have been… The Dresden Files (2007) I know fans of the books didn’t care for this show, but I never had that experience.  There was nothing to ruin for me when Syfy put this show on the air.  And you know what?  When you throw out the adaptation aspect, it’s really not a terrible show.  Sure, some of the episodes are a little crummy, and there’s a clear tug-of-war between making all the episodes connected to a larger story and keeping the anthology format.  But the best episodes are really good, and the cast is, for the most part, well chosen (I personally liked Paul Blackthorne as Dresden and Terrence Mann as Bob). Given a second season, it might have grown into something akin to Castle, but with weird critters and what not.  One day… Earth 2 (1994-1995) Let’s get one thing straight:  this is not a perfect show by any stretch of the imagination.  There’s a hell of a lot of weirdness going on from the first episode to the last, and some of the characters and acting are a little on the silly side.  But the concept is fantastic.  Maybe a reboot would be a good idea.  Maybe not.  It was good… After all, it has Tim Curry as a villain (win), a ragtag group of survivors living on a world with weird people (sounds like Outcasts, no?), and a decent soundtrack and visual design.  Considering all the things that usually go wrong in SF TV, this show had a lot of potential.  And then they killed it… Alien Nation (1988-1989) You remember this show, right?  Aliens get dropped off on Earth and are integrated into the Los Angeles populace.  Discrimination ensues.  District 9 will ring some bells.  Yet Alien Nation was a very American affair.  Where District 9 was an allegory for the refugee situation in Africa, Alien Nation was about the Civil Rights Movement, anti-immigration, and all the stuff tied into that at home.  And it was brilliant, in part because it didn’t just take a bunch of people, put some alien makeup on them, and stick them in hairy situations.  No.  Alien Nation asked us to consider how discrimination leads to criminalization, how relationships with humans (platonic and romantic) would work, and the politics of a world hell bent on protecting human interests. Plus, my grandma loved it, and if she likes it, it’s good.  Trust me. Outcasts (2010) This show should sound familiar.  That’s because I mentioned it above and because it really does share a lineage with ————————————————- What would you add to the list and why?

Retro Nostalgia

Retro Nostalgia: The Bourne Identity (2002) and the Politics of Amnesia

One of the things that fascinates me about the Bourne movies is the question raised by his amnesia within the ideology of terrorism (read:  War on Terrorism, etc.).  To think about Bourne’s amnesia as a symptom of a particular form of national ideology is to understand that his amnesia is not simply a convenient plot device (though it is one), but also a symptom of a public amnesia.  In other words, just as Bourne’s condition enables him to alter the real by making it imaginary — i.e., changing one’s identity entirely — so too do the cast of characters who use ignorance (or willful amnesia) to wipe themselves clean of culpability (ex. Ward Abbott).  The public does not know, and those that do know fulfill one of three identities:  1) true amnesiac; 2) willful amnesiac; and 3) maintenance amnesiac (Conklin, who maintains the barrier between those that don’t need to know (the public) and those that don’t want to know (Abbott)). Bourne’s identity, however, is split by a seeming contradiction.  On the one hand, his amnesia defines him as one who does not know himself; on the other, he is defined by what he does not (or cannot or will not) remember, but about which others have profound knowledge.  To not know oneself, therefore, does not necessarily mean one cannot be known, as is the state of the amnesiac in nature.  But for Bourne, those with knowledge of his true self are those who want him buried, not least of all because awareness of self threatens the security of the system.  Here the political moment rears its ugly head.  To have knowledge of the undesirable opens a new series of relations:  1) the one who knows, but doesn’t want to know (Bourne); 2) the one who doesn’t know (the public); 3) the one who doesn’t know, but doesn’t want to know (Abbott); and 4) the one who knows (Conklin).  It becomes crucial for #3 and #4 to keep #2 in the dark, because the public is the body who ultimately controls the others.  But the public’s lack of knowledge is a choice, albeit one that reads more like a handwaving than a direct order (if the order were given, they would know what is being done in their name); they live in perpetual amnesia.  For Bourne, however, the question stems from who he was before and who he has become after the traumatic moment.  This makes him dangerous not least of all to Conklin (#4), but to the mental security of the public (#2).  Just as Bourne’s identity is shattered by the realization of who he was, so too is the public’s identity subject to traumatic exposure.  Thus the threat that Bourne poses:  forcing a public to re-imagine itself in light of torture, assassination, and rampant civil rights abuses, all part of an image of American selfhood that cannot exist concurrantly with the image Americans have made for themselves.  That Bourne exists in this political structure suggests, I think, something profound about the Bourne movies:  an awareness of what the years immediately following 9/11 have done to the public consciousness — namely, put us all into a relation between amnesiacs. Bourne, however, does reject the past he cannot remember — and its attending identity — before knowing who he really is or what he has really done.  In choosing not to remember, he attempts, albeit unsuccessfully (see The Bourne Supremacy), to erase the traumatic through accepting the amnesiatic moment.  But in that erasure, his position in the relation of amnesiacs shifts only in relation to the public, who will never know so long as Bourne tries to move on with his life.  For Conklin and Abbott (the latter more in the second film than here), there is no possibility of security; Bourne will always constitute a threat until he is brought back into the fold or destroyed.  And yet, as the movies show, in holding dogmatically to the desire to control knowledge, the system which Conklin maintains and Abbott reboots (and Noah Vosen takes up in The Bourne Ultimatum) inevitably collapses under its own weight.  To put it another way, systematic extermination of the 1st of the four relations (i.e., the one who knows, but doesn’t want to know) results in exposing one’s hand and opens holes in the structure to be exploited. None of this is a perfect explanation of what I’m trying to get at.  Obviously Abbott has some knowledge of Conklin’s activities, but I take as given that Abbott only set up the system, but intentionally extricated himself from the chain of information to make it possible to feign ignorance.  And I have left out the women in the film (specifically, Marie), but only because I suspect they will play a more crucial role in future Bourne-related posts.  I hope what I’ve tried to elucidate gives some indication of the complexity of the social dynamics of the film.  If not, then I’ll make myself the amnesiac and pretend this post doesn’t exist. ———————————————————– Feel free to let me know what you think of The Bourne Identity, or to poke holes into what I’m saying.  The comments are yours!

SF/F Commentary

Crowd-funding Update of Doom (New Perks)

For those following my progress on G+, this will not be news to you.  If you’re not, then lots of news to come.  If you have no idea what I’m talking about, then you should probably read this. Currently, things rest as follows: –Straight donations:  $145 –Zombie Painting Auction:  $25 (+$25 match) The big update for the project is that there are now two official perks (one you’ve already seen, and one new one): Perk #1: Those who you follow my podcasts will know that my friend and I do a special segment for The Skiffy and Fanty Show called “Torture Cinema,” in which we review bad science fiction and fantasy movies (sometimes books) while drinking alcohol. Anyone who donates $50 or more (including via the auction) will get to pick a movie for us to watch starting in August. No voting. You get to be dictator for the day. There are only two rules: 1) the film must be SF/F (broadly defined), and 2) it must be something we haven’t reviewed yet. You can find the list of previous Tortures here: http://skiffyandfanty.com/torture-cinema/ Perk #2: I’m giving away a small collection of short stories for donations $10 and up (whether direct to me or through John Ward’s zombie painting auction). The stories will include:–“Burned by Sol’s Rain” (high-octane military SF involving time dilation and human/machine hybrids, among other things)–“Irlgem” (sword and sorcery story about a female knight and a murder and a dangerous magic item)–“Dear [Redacted]” (a humorous letter explaining why a planet as been marked for extermination, more or less)–“Interstellar Realty” (a humorous far future tale about customer service, real estate, mortgage payments, and robotic dogs) Sound cool?  I sure hope so… Anywho!

SF/F Commentary

English Majors Study Creative Writing (or, How to Look Like an Idiot)

Apparently some people read “getting a PhD in English” as “getting a PhD in creative writing.” I find this hilarious because it demonstrates a profound ignorance of what studying English entails. Things I don’t do as a PhD student in English (that is as a necessary part of getting my degree):–Meet up for weekly book clubs–Join critique groups–Learn how to write fiction–Read fiction and nothing else–Make up imaginary interpretations for books so that I can sound smart What I actually do:–Read fiction with the intention of understanding its impact on culture (vice versa) or its critiques or its various other components, which are important as product of culture–Read philosophy, theory, history, politics, science, and other types of texts which are relevant to a cultural understanding of literature (in other words, everything relevant to a particular field)–Write essays which incorporate these elements as part of the same argument. (Basically, almost all English studies are Cultural studies these days.)–Anything related to these topics and not related to writing fiction, creative non-fiction, or other forms of non-argumentative of writing. Odd how different they are, no? What would you add to the lists?

SF/F Commentary

Survey Says: My American Lit Course Reading List

I’ve finally finished my bloody syllabus for the survey in American lit that I will be teaching this fall.  Since some folks expressed interest in what I will be forcing my little college students to read, I’ve compiled the list in no certain order here (mostly chronological, though it may be).  The theme of the course is “labor and race,” though that is loose theme since the course is a survey, not a special topics.  But you’ll notice that the majority of the texts have to do with the working class, the Great Depression, race, Civil Rights, and so on. Anywho.  Here’s the list: (1901) “Old Rogaum and His Theresa” by Theodore Dreiser (1915) “War Brides” by Marion Craig Wentworth (1918) “Mine Eyes Have Seen” by Alice Dunbar-Nelson (1901) Up from Slavery by Booker T. Washington (selections) (1926) “Smoke, Lilies and Jade” by Richard Bruce Nugent (1931) Black No More by George Schuyler (1922) “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button” by F. Scott Fitzgerald (1930) As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner (1933) “Miss Lonelyhearts” by Nathanael West (1935) “The Grave” by Katherine Anne Porter (1939) Christ in Concrete by Pietro di Donato (1955) “The Artificial Nigger” by Flannery O’Connor (1965) “Going to Meet the Man” by James Baldwin (1977) “Advancing Luna–and Ida B. Wells” by Alice Walker (1990) “The Death of the Last Black Man in the Entire World” by Suzan-Lori Parks (1968) “Lost in the Funhouse” by John Barth (1972) “When it Changed” by Joanna Russ (1969) Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut (1987) Dawn by Octavia Butler (1973) “The Girl Who Was Plugged In” by James Tiptree, Jr. Suggestions and thoughts welcome!

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