SF/F Commentary

SF/F Commentary

American Literature Syllabus: Suggestions Open!

For those that don’t know, the syllabus I had designed for an American Lit. survey course got rejected.  The reasoning behind that rejection makes sense, and I’ve been told point blank that if I want to teach that same course in the Spring (under a World Literature heading), it’ll happen.  But that means I’ve got to put together an entirely new syllabus. As of this moment, I am thinking about framing this survey course with the loose theme of “American identity.”  I want to have as wide an exploration of this question as possible, both to show the breadth of such concerns within American lit and to avoid having too narrow of a focus (i.e., one segment of identity).  There are a number of novels, short stories, and plays I am considering for the syllabus, including some that I’ve taught before (such as Black No More by George Schuyler).  But I’d like to expand my focus. This is where you come in.  Which novels, short stories, or plays would you suggest for a syllabus loosely concerned with “American identity”?  So long as the work is written by someone from the U.S. after 1900, it qualifies.  Genres are not relevant, though I always include a little science fiction (sometimes fantasy) in my syllabi (I’m currently thinking about teaching One for Sorrow by Christopher Barzak, for example). So have at it! (Note:  I am interested in canonical work as well as work by various ethnic or minority groups, including African Americans, Native Americans, LGBT folks, refugees (and related categories), women, and so on and so forth.  I deliberately write my syllabi to include a range of different groups to show my students that the “canon” is not really a representation of American literature as a whole and that these other literary “groups” are important.  Understand that I can’t fit everything in.  I feel bad about that every time I teach a survey course.  I want to cover every single group imaginable, but I can’t.  16 weeks just isn’t enough time 🙁 ).

SF/F Commentary

Dear Regal Cinemas: Insane People and How Your Staff Responded

I’d like to share a story with everyone.  Today, I went to see World War Z.  It’s a zombie film, so I’ve been looking forward to it for a while (zombies are the only thing that legitimately scares me anymore, with rare exception).  So I put on some pants, shuffled out the door, and walked the 2 miles to the nearest Regal Cinema (#14 in Gainesville, FL, in case you were wondering).  Don’t feel bad for me about having to walk that far, though.  I got to read comic books on my Nook HD+ on the way, and I purposefully chose to walk (buses don’t run often enough on the weekends anyway). In any case, I’ve been going to this theater since I moved to Gainesville (except when I have to go to the other one to see things Regal #14 doesn’t carry).  It’s a decent enough place.  Nothing special, but I’ve never had any issues with the theater before, except the occasional annoying jabberface.  Unfortunately, jabberfaces are common at all theaters.  I say this so you’ll understand why I was so shocked by what I experienced there. About 30-45 minutes into World War Z, another patron decided to start having a conversation with his female companion (girlfriend, sister, or something).  Occasional comments don’t bother me; I do that myself when I’m with others.  But this fell within the “full blown conversation” territory.  That annoys the hell out of me, and for good reason.  I don’t go to the movies to listen to other people talk; I go, obviously, to see a movie.  And that’s what I expect when I go to a theater.  A movie experience.  An immersive experience.  I want to get lost in the movie.  I want to forget that I’m in a theater so I can enjoy the hell out of what is going on up on that big screen thing.  And when a jabberface ruins that experience, it understandably annoys me.  Jabberfaces suck you right out of that immersive experience.  They inject something from the real world into the fantasy one.  They destroy the movie experience entirely.  I dislike jabberfaces quite a lot, you see.  And so do a lot of other people. So it was with trepidation that I turned and offered my first-line-of-defense:  the “shhh.”  I shushed this individual and his companion not just once, but three times before I and another nearby patron finally got fed up, turned around and told him to please be quiet.  I think my exact words were, “Could you please stop having a conversation?”  I don’t think the other guy was so nice (there may have been a “fuck” in there), but I don’t fault him for such language.  It had to be said. And here’s where it gets insane.  The jabberface decided that instead of kindly shutting up so the rest of us could enjoy the movie, he would instead flex his little muscles and confront us for our behavior.  I honestly can’t remember half of what he said, since most of it was incoherent crotch-grabbing nonsense, but here’s the gist:  “You don’t know me. You shut the fuck up or I’ll come over there and shut your face for you.  And as for you (me), you just sit there and shut your mouth.”  That’s the really watered-down version.  His actual tirade went on for a full minute, in which he primarily flexed his manly muscles at the other annoyed patron.  There were borderline threats made during the tirade, along with a sea of n-words and other swear words. Unfortunately, when these things happen, I shut down.  In all honesty, I think most instances of physical confrontation are moronic, and since I’m not a glutton for pain, I tend to avoid them as much as possible.  In this case, I didn’t see a point in engaging with someone who clearly couldn’t disentangle “greatest offense against my person EVER” from “please don’t have a conversation in a movie theater.”  I shut down and ignored him as best I could, partly out of fear and partly out of a refusal to give in to childish antics.  If he was willing to fight over something as stupid as being asked to shut up during a movie, then there was no point engaging with him any further. Eventually, he realized the other patron wasn’t going to back down, so he sat his little childish toosh down and tried to play the “now where were we” card.  But he’d clearly lost.  There was no saving face when you’re the guy that looks like a petulant child in front of hundreds of other people.  At some point during all this, someone had gone to tell a manager.  Several minutes later, the manager came in and had a talk with the two men.  I don’t know what she said to them, as she apparently had the magic gift for conversation-in-a-theater-that-nobody-else-can-hear.  However, I gathered what she had done:  issued the warnings that would put jabberface in his place.  From that moment on, the theater was quiet (except for the occasional giggle from someone who found amusement in teeth-chattering). When the film ended, there were no further confrontations.  I spoke briefly with some other folks who stayed behind in the theater and came to the conclusion that we all were rather shocked by what had happened.  One of the other patrons (an un-involved one) told me that he had asked his son to move to the other side of the theater to avoid the confrontation entirely.  I don’t blame him.  When someone stands up in a theater puffing and throwing out borderline fighting words, it’s entirely reasonable to take precautions (and certainly so in this day and age).  He was doing what a good father does:  protect his family. Afterwards, I went to talk to the manager.  Honestly, I don’t remember her name, but she was a nice individual who listened to my concerns and answered my questions about appropriate procedure.  How exactly does a

SF/F Commentary

Genre Books for Non-Genre People: Still Missing the Point, Folks!

The other day, Damien G. Walter posted the following on his Google+ account: Now that Fantasy / SF is taking over the mainstream, which books do you recommend to people who have not read it before? Thus far, two people have responded with posts of their own:  my friend and podcast co-host Paul Weimer and John Stevens.  Each list has a particular perspective for the textual choices, and each is valid in its own way.  But they are also effectively useless lists without a pre-defined “non-genre person.”  Whenever lists like this come out, that perspective is almost always ignored.  Nobody seems willing to address the fact that non-genre readers are not a homogeneous group. Paul’s list, for example, includes the following: Leviathan Wakes by James S.A. Corey The Warrior’s Apprentice by Lois McMaster Bujold The Hammer and the Blade by Paul S. Kemp Storm Front by Jim Butcher Flesh and Fire by Laura Anne Gilman. The only mention of an audience in his post is a throwaway line about people who read novels.  There’s no mention of the things they like to read.  Are they Clive Cussler fans?  Do they prefer the prose of Amy Tan or Ian McEwan?  What about Jonathan Franzen or Ernest Hemingway?  Are they fans of modernist writing, or are they more into the postmodernist crowd?  Or maybe they don’t like any of that.  Maybe they’re romance readers, or they prefer political thrillers, or regular thrillers.  Or they read Dan Brown or James Paterson (they’re both basically genre, I guess).   The point:  his readers could be anyone, and that makes his selections functionally useless.  Unless you suggest these works to someone you can reasonably expect to enjoy them based on what they already enjoy, you’re basically flipping a coin.  You might get that one reader who devours these books the same way Paul clearly has, or you might get that one reader who views these as the reason why genre fiction is worthless. The more problematic issue here stem’s from the list’s clear conscious or subconscious assumed or intended readership.  While the invoked audience for these works is overly broad, the actual works presented here fall within a very particular camp of readers.  These are not what most would call “literary novels.”  They are, in the most loving way I can say it, pure genre.  Gracing the list are a high-octane space opera (Corey), a mostly fun urban fantasy (Butcher), a rip-roaring fantasy adventure novel (not unlike Indiana Jones; Kemp), a military SF novel (Bujold), and a fantasy epic (Gilman).  Understandably, I’m describing these somewhat unfairly.  They are more complicated than the simplistic generic traditions with which they are identified, but the ease with which they can fall into these categories presents a crucial problem:  they are not novels that will appeal to the widest range of people, generally speaking.  I stand by that.  Some of the folks who might start with these novels may find themselves less willing to try again.  Why?  The simple fact that these books aren’t really for “non-genre” people; rather, they are more fairly aimed at those who may not read genre yet, but whose literary sensibilities lean toward the genre camp.  For that group, these novels will suck them in (I hope, that is).  For everyone else?  Flipping a coin. Stevens’ list presents different challenges.  His selections are actually more grounded than Paul’s (this might have something to do with a tweet by Damien G. Walter that I have yet to see).  Rather than providing a nebulous intended audience, Stevens specifically identifies his audience as “those who are new to the genre.” While this doesn’t narrow the focus or define these new or incoming readers in terms of their previous reading interests, it does establish a better foundation.  With that perspective in mind, Stevens suggests the following: Wizard of the Pigeons by Megan Lindholm Midnight Riot by Ben Aaronovitch Paladin of Souls by Lois McMaster Bujold The Wild Shore by Kim Stanley Robinson The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms by N.K. Jemisin There are definitely some great authors here (I haven’t read them all).  The problem?  In my experience, Robinson’s Three Californias best fits among the (to use a pointless term) “literary crowd.”  I taught The Gold Coast last year and discovered that it didn’t sit well with students who came in with certain expectations of genre.  That doesn’t mean The Wild Shore or any of the Three Californias novels are bad or unworthy of suggestion; rather, I say this in order to suggest that Three Californias deserves to be suggested under entirely different conditions:  namely, ones in which you have a far more specific understanding of what someone likes.  Compared to the other works on Steven’s list, Robinson’s stands out as the one most likely to appeal to audiences who don’t have experience with generic traditions.  The Lindholm, Aaronovitch, Bujold, and Jemisin are all writers whose work, in my mind, will have greater effect on those who are already reading things that are similar enough to genre.  In that respect, they fit quite well into Steven’s list, as they are works which are geared towards “new readers of genre.”   But, again, it all comes down to what we mean by “new readers.”  What are they currently reading?  Who is a “new reader”?  Does someone who reads Salman Rushdie, Jane Rogers, or Gabriel Garcia Marquez qualify as a “new reader of genre”?  Or are we talking about people who have, for example, started reading genre because they saw Game of Thrones and wanted to read the books?  This distinction is crucial.  Even more crucial, however, are the additional distinctions (distinctions upon distinctions) — there are fantasy readers, SF readers, SF/F readers, urban fantasy readers, readers who hate fantasy, readers who hate science fiction, readers who hate X, Y, or Z (or even Q).  The reader is everything when it comes to suggestions.  Are readers are naturally conservative (i.e., they don’t like to try new things)?  Not necessarily.  What I’m concerned with here is the desire to

SF/F Commentary

Things Happening Now: Shoot the WISB and Man of Steel

After a brief Twitter discussion with Paul Weimer, I’ve decided to move the Shoot the WISB segments over to The Skiffy and Fanty Show.  There are a few reasons for this, but the fact that this blog is, well, a blog is the most obvious of those reasons. In any case, if you want to hear the latest episode, you can do so here.  Paul and I are joined by David Annandale and Michael Underwood to discuss Man of Steel! Thanks for listening!

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