SF/F Commentary

Genre Walking 2012: Results from 2011 and the New Goal

You remember that walking/jogging pledge I made with Jason Sanford and other authors?  It’s on again.  If you want to walk with me, all you have to do is enter your miles do the form located here. As for last year’s results:  I got a little lazy in recording my miles, but I’m pretty sure I met my 200-mile goal, or thereabouts.  The last month or two of the semester were so busy that I didn’t get as much walking done as I wanted to.  But that’s okay.  2012 is a new year, right? That brings my to this year’s pledge! I will not only walk 300 miles this year (an easy enough goal, I think), but I am also going to lose 25 lbs. at the minimum.  I will weigh myself tomorrow so you all know where I’m starting from. The more of you who join and urge me on, the better.  You should set your goals too.  Blog about it and put a link in the comments.  I’ll add it to this post!

Book Reviews

Book Review: After the Apocalypse by Maureen F. McHugh

Collections of short stories are still the hardest thing for me to review, which invariably means the following review will be flawed both methodologically and stylistically.  But perhaps I can move past this by way of the  interconnected-ness of the stories in Maureen F. McHugh’s After the Apocalypse.  Unlike most collections, McHugh’s stories revolve around the same premise in the same world:  something has gone terribly wrong with our world; the nine stories in After the Apocalypse are about those who have survived, or are surviving. That’s essentially what this collection is about:  how human beings respond to catastrophe.  But, mostly, the collection about survival, without all the exotic images our post-apocalyptic movies show us.  There are no grand heroes here, nor an assurance that “things are turning around.”  These are stories caught in the middle between the moment of catastrophe, the moment immediately after, and the intermediate moments between “the world as it was” and “the better world to come.”  And it’s that focus which makes After the Apocalypse one of the most beautiful literary feats of 2011. Despite following a similar theme, each of McHugh’s stories is distinct in vision and voice, from a young man imprisoned in a city compound infested with zombies in “The Naturalist” to a woman trying to make a living in the wastelands along the U.S. border with Mexico in “Useless Things”; from Chinese women trying to free themselves from indentured labor to Chinese corporations in “Special Economics” to a magazine-style article about a young man who survived a dirty bomb attack, but lost his identity in “The Lost Boy:  A Reporter At Large”; from two computer programmings debating whether their AI is trying to communicate in “The Kingdom of the Blind” to the sudden and strange shared desire for travel to France in “Going to France”; from a young woman’s attempts to make something of her life after a failed marriage in “Honeymoon” to a family struggling through the after-effects of a time-dilated disease spread through food in “The Effect of Centrifugal Forces” to, finally, a woman and her young daughter struggling their way north after America’s economy and borders collapse, and also struggling with themselves in “After the Apocalypse.”  The variety of perspectives and content produces a palimpsest of narrative; in other words, each story seems to layer on top of the one that proceeded it, turning what in other collections would be a disparate set of worlds viewed through a particular gaze into a set of stories that feel inherently collaborative.  What one story cannot do due to the limits of space, the next might. Paul Kincaid has argued that “McHugh’s approach to the apocalypse is oblique, a concern with the personal, the individual or family unit, rather than the devastation that surrounds them” (from Strange Horizons).  He’s right.  The palimpsest that is McHugh’s collection is perhaps driven by the intense personal nature of her narratives.  No story in this collection is about the apocalypse-that-was.  We never see the events that led McHugh’s characters to a relatively solitary life along the border (“Useless Things”) or to make a break for the city to make something of herself (“Special Economics”).  We only learn about the catastrophes in retrospect, often through the eyes of characters who no more know what happened than any of us can say, with any certainty, what exactly happened on 9/11.  Complex events are compressed into single-strain narratives.  The effect is wondrous, if not because it’s refreshing to see a different approach to catastrophe/apocalypse, then certainly because McHugh’s stories, by and large, are beautiful. That’s not to suggest that every story in this collection succeeds in what I’ve interpreted as a narratory path.  “Honeymoon” leaves something to be desired, though the only reason I can muster is that the story never felt like it belonged in the collection, and, perhaps, in comparison to stories like “Special Economics,” “Useless Things,” or “The Effect of Centrifugal Forces,” it falls short of the mark, both on a personal and narrative level.  Similarly, “The Kingdom of the Blind” and “Going to France,” while interesting enough, don’t quite approach the grim personal nature of the other stories in the collection.  The personal, I think, is where McHugh shines, as demonstrated by “The Naturalist” (the criminal), “Special Economics” (the exploited), “Useless Things” (the struggling), “The Lost Boy:  A Reporter at Large” (the broken survivor), “The Effect of Centrifugal Forces” (those who survive the dead or dying), and “After the Apocalypse” (the disconnected).  These stories provide a kind of funhouse mirror in which to examine humanity, distorted through a world that just might be.  The effect is chilling and humbling, because McHugh shows us how fragile, and yet beautiful and unique, human beings really. After the Apocalypse is a thorough, if not unsettling, journey into the human psyche after catastrophe, at once thrilling, compelling, and disturbing.  This collection alone proves that McHugh is a force to be reckoned with in the world of genre, for her simple-but-beautiful prose, evocative imagery, and raw human explorations make After the Apocalypse one of the best works of SF of this decade.  You can expect to see this book appear in my WISB Awards in February. If you’d like to learn more about Maureen McHugh, check out her website.  You can find more information about After the Apocalypse at Small Beer Press.

SF/F Commentary

Crying “Censorship”: Why Getting Banned Isn’t Censorship

You’ll probably have noticed that a lot of crazy nonsense took place here and then migrated over here when Jen and I put our feet in piranha-infested waters.  This isn’t the first time Jen and I have played emotional bees and frolicked in the convoluted mess of gender politics.  But that’s not really the point of this post.  Rather, I’d like to use the aforementioned links as illustrative examples of my central point: Deleting a comment or banning a commenter on a private website is not censorship. Since Liz Bourke’s original post, a number of people have almost joyously proclaimed they have been censored when they were banned from Tor.com (or would be banned from The Skiffy and Fanty Show — one individual on Baen assumed we would delete anything he wrote simply because he would disagree with us; the comment is still there). Neither of these things, however, constitute censorship, in part because private spaces have specialized rules which determine what can and cannot be said.  If someone waltzes into your house and starts babbling at you about why Obama is a bad choice for President or Gingrich will repeal child labor laws, you have every right to remove that person from your home and prevent them from entering again.  This act is defended by the U.S. Constitution, by our laws, and by our social codes.  Few would call that censorship.  A house is a private space, inside which you make the rules for interaction (provided they follow the rules from the outside — no murdering in your house). The same concept applies to websites that are privately owned or run.*  Much like the privacy guaranteed in your home, you equally are guaranteed privacy on your website.  That means that you are able to determine who can and cannot see your posts, who can and cannot comment, and so on.  In fact, Google does much of this on its own by snagging spam comments from the aether and casting them to the dark abyss (the same with WordPress, etc.).  None of these acts are censorship, since nothing has been done to prevent you from being able to speak on the Internet.  Provided you still have a place to speak, your rights have not been violated.  You are entitled to your opinion and your voice, but not to a listening audience. Censorship on the web, thus, is rather tricky.  At what point does the removal of content become censorship?  I’m not sure there are any easy answers to this question.  Because the Internet is vast, if not nearly infinite, there are few boundaries to free speech in the U.S.  The tables turn when you go to a place like China, where hackers serve as police officers against online dissent, where content from main sources are removed from Google’s search database, and so on.  Is that censorship? I would argue that the distinction between personal space and censorship seems to follow this logic:  so long as the avenues of discussion remain open, your rights have not been infringed; so long as websites themselves are subject to removal without reasonable cause,** you’re looking at censorship. This seems like a relatively simple concept to understand, but plenty of people cry “censorship” anyway.  Perhaps they do so as an emotional reaction, or because they really believe that the 1st Amendment means you can say whatever you want wherever you want.  The truth is that private spaces come with limitations and rules, many of them unspoken.  Many websites don’t have comment policies, running instead on the tolerance levels of the owners.  Those tolerance levels will vary considerably. In other words, think of your website as a digital house.  If you have no problem letting anyone come in and say whatever they want, then good for you.  But if you want to limit discussions or focus them, doing so in your own space means you’re simply taking control of your house.  And if we’re being honest, most of us have house rules that we expect others to follow (and house rules we set for ourselves when we visit other people’s homes).  The difference between a house and the Internet, however, is that the Internet guarantees anonymity and/or distance.  Bravery is necessarily an attending element. ——————————————- *I don’t know whether censorship applies to government websites, though there aren’t many government websites with comment threads, as far as I can remember. **For example, I wouldn’t consider the removal of a website that shares pirated files (not links, but files) as censorship, since free speech does not extend to violating the law.

SF/F Commentary

SandF #84 (Women in Military SF (or The Kratman Rule is B.S.)) is Live!

I don’t think we’ve had a potentially controversial episode on The Skiffy and Fanty Show in a while.  But I think we’ve just solved that with #84.  Here’s the description: Our first hard-hitting episode of the year is finally here. This week, we talk about the recent controversy at Tor.com over Liz Bourke’s post about women in military SF, sexism, Joe Haldeman, David Weber, how science fiction might look at the “gender” question in the military, and much more. We’re a little less PC, a whole lot more opinionated, and altogether our cheery selves. Feel free to give it a listen and leave a comment with your thoughts.  Really.  Even if it’s hate mail…

SF/F Commentary

Video Found: Star Wars Uncut

I have no idea how I didn’t know about the following video before now.  Apparently a bunch of Star Wars nuts decided it would be hilarious to re-film Star Wars: A New Hope from start to finish.  But they didn’t stop there.  No.  Instead of the same group of people playing all the roles like those kids who did that shot-by-shot copy of Indiana Jones and the Lost Ark, these folks got dozens and dozens of people to film 15-second sections.  And the segments aren’t all live action either.  There are cats (obviously), vacuum cleaners, legos, action figures, cartoons, and all kinds of other weird things, living or otherwise. To put it bluntly:  this is the greatest fan film ever made.  And you must spend two hours of your life watching it…

SF/F Commentary

SOPA and Piracy: A Brief and Random Afterthought

Google, Wikipedia, and all manner of folks have taken up the protest gauntlet against SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act), a bill that, if passed, would hand over an extraordinary amount of power to the Federal government, restrict freedom of expression (the 1st Amendment), and make life for website creators and owners difficult at best.  As the co-owner of a website for young writers, these things concern me greatly, as SOPA would make me responsible for what a member posts.  That’s not to say that Young Writers Online is a haven for plagiarized material, but it is an open website and things sneak through.  The idea that the entire site should be taken down because I didn’t find out soon enough is absurd.  But SOPA makes that possible. I won’t proclaim to be an expert in this area.  If you’re looking for an expert, Cory Doctorow is probably the best choice.  But I do find the direction the media empires behind laws like SOPA are trying to take us worrisome.  I don’t doubt that piracy is a financial problem, but I’m not convinced that the figures thrown at us by SOPA supporters are accurate or necessarily relevant. What doesn’t make sense to me is this:  if piracy really is a problem to the extent that we’re told (i.e., that if we don’t stop it, the creative industry will go belly up), then clearly the pirates are doing something really well.  Maybe instead of wasting millions trying to create and pass abusive laws like SOPA or crack down on pirates and websites, the media empires could take that money to do the following: Create better content (let’s be honest:  most movies, TV shows, music, and books suck, and not necessarily because of personal taste) Make that content easy to access, affordable, and unrestricted to a reasonable degree (i.e., if I buy a digital movie, I should be able to put it on anything I own within reason — say 10 devices at a time or something). Change the way copyright is enacted and enforced.  In particular, I think we should move from region-specific copyrights, to a generalized “world” copyright for most forms of media.  If not that, then at least all English-language materials should be accessible to everyone in English-language countries at the same time — in every format.  There’s a lot more that could be said here, but I’ll leave it at that. Think of piracy as competition.  You can’t beat it by trying to stop it.  You can only beat it by doing better. I think #4 is the biggest issue here.  The majority of the media empires haven’t had any real competition in decades.  Few of us can tell the difference between 20th Century Fox and Warner Bros. based on what they produce (though certainly there are obvious differences between Disney and other studios), so it’s not as if any of these companies can reasonably assert that they make a better product.  Movie studios aren’t like different brands of chocolate.  And while these empires have been battling against one another in a futile battle of “who can make the better selling movie/book/etc.,” pirates have been coming up with unique ways to share things.  In the process, they’ve left a lot of tools behind, which indie creators, software companies, and so on have used to create entire new industries, forms, and so on. That’s competition.  Just because it’s not based in profits (with rare exception) doesn’t mean it’s not competition.  The only way to deal with competitors is beat them at their own game.  Sadly, most of the media empires aren’t doing that.  They’re trying to find an easy way around the problem.  Easy ways out always produce unexpected results, and damaging the Constitution is not a worthwhile unexpected result. Ever.

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