My friend [personal profile] foxfinial has been getting a lot of undeserved flak for pointing out that some aspects of the dialogue at Eastercon were overtly misinformed and racist. Eastercon, for the uninitiated (which I certainly was before last weekend), is the annual British National Science Fiction convention.

I participated in Eastercon this year as a panelist and a speaker on the Friday. Now, I was fortunate enough to have been invited by a friend and colleague, [livejournal.com profile] purplecthulhu, who did a wonderful job making me feel both welcome and comfortable. He helped keep me included in the dialogue during the panel on the space race. I did some of this myself, mind, but I can't deny that it was a boon to have him checking to be sure that each time a topic was introduced, I got to have my say if I wanted, and to prevent me from being put on the spot by the more experienced members of the panel and the audience. This is not an action to be dismissed lightly when there are four people on the panel and you are the only person who is female and not white. [livejournal.com profile] purplecthulhu, I salute you.

Despite seeing positive responses to my talk on Twitter under the #eastercon hashtag, I can't ignore that the majority of the audience was male and white. And while I hope that being a "hardcore science bug" who loves her job, as one person labelled me, left the impression that women can indeed be dedicated, enthusiastic engineers and scientists, I have trouble believing that it's an impression that will have a lasting impact.

Why? Because I don't find that most science fiction speaks to me. I received two free books at Eastercon. I got about halfway through both of them, but have little motivation to finish because they didn't engage me. The main characters are male, angst-ridden and on journeys that involve a lot of interaction with other male authority figures. The women, if they are present, are either brawny sidekicks or romantic interests. Even if they're described as clever or technically adept, they never display it through dialogue or the mechanisms of the plot. And did I mention that everybody's white? At the very least, that's what the front covers would have you believe, and when you read the character descriptions - pale skin and white-blonde hair predominating - the image becomes indelible.

So I'm afraid that despite my willing participation in Eastercon and my enthusiasm for the future of space exploration and science, I am not willing to state categorically that science fiction and its fandoms are free of problematic racist and sexist associations that are being propagated by publisher's choices. Attacking people like [personal profile] foxfinial is not going to fix the problem. Pointing out that something is racist is not, in fact, worse than being racist. If you write science fiction, change your choices of main characters, the cultures in which you place them and the journeys you send them on. If you read science fiction, select, review and praise those books. Only then will the perception of science fiction become diverse and inclusive. Because it actually will be.
ceb: (Default)

From: [personal profile] ceb


And if you're after recommendations, Octavia Butler too, e.g. Parable of the Sower but really anything you can get your hands on...
bagfish: (Default)

From: [personal profile] bagfish


Seconding Parable of the Sower/Parable of the talents. Strong female characters as well as mainly non-white characters.

I would also suggest Elizabeth Moon's Serrano series, great, gripping space opera with fantastic female characters from a variety of races. Despite the covers almost always showing a white woman, Heris Serrano is very definitely written as a PoC.

Hope you don't mind me joining in the conversation, I was pointed in this direction by miss_s_b's links post here http://miss-s-b.dreamwidth.org/1240598.html where she links to both your post and Alex Dally MacFarlane's about Eastercon. Thanks for raising these issues, it's so blindingly obvious that there is a problem, but it's only blindingly obvious if you're not the one sitting in the (white/straight/male) position of privilege and power.
bagfish: (Default)

From: [personal profile] bagfish


Ugh, I hadn't heard anything about Elizabeth Moon's failblog post - just done some googling and I'm really disappointed by what I found. My bad :(

Anyway, I'm going to be reading some of the reccs people have made above, thanks for making the space for people to talk about good books! I've not managed and McMaster Bujold despite having people rave about her writing all the time, so she is a must.
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