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Posts Tagged ‘Octavia Butler’

Women’s Week Continues with Octavia Butler

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

The week prior to break, a break I’m on as of a few hours ago, caree­ned slightly out of con­trol, con­se­quently I’m later and with less than I had hoped for. I hoped to do a women a day, in retros­pect a lofty thought for the kind of week I was pre­pa­ring for.

Con­ti­nuing on the theme of women, as a pre­lude to Inter­na­tio­nal Women’s Day, I’m going to stick with the authors and acti­vists, or author/activists, as the afo­re­men­tio­ned Dorothy Par­ker and Zai­nab Sal­biof fit that category.

Today it’s Octa­via Butler.

But­ler was an Ame­ri­can nove­list, short story wri­ter, and essa­yist, as well as a subli­mi­nal acti­vist. Though she has a huge fan base still, and there was heart­felt op-ed memo­ria­li­zing when she died, much too early, from a fall and head injury in 2006, the man on the street is not all that fami­liar with her work. Her work doesn’t often make the book club dis­cus­sions list of the gar­den party class. That is unfor­tu­nate because not only was she a mul­ti­ple award win­ning science fic­tion wri­ter, in a world where most science fic­tion was writ­ten by men, she was Afri­can Ame­ri­can author in a world where Afri­can Ame­ri­can authors were ignored.

105001840_9c4e67064dPhoto, NikolasCo’s .

But­ler once called her­self “com­for­ta­ble aso­cial” ‘a pes­si­mist if I’m not care­ful, a femi­nist, a Black, a for­mer Bap­tist, an oil-and-water com­bi­na­tion of ambi­tion, lazi­ness, inse­cu­rity, cer­tainty and drive.” She was somewhat of a her­mit, did not like to lec­ture — if she had to be up front she pre­fe­rred to ans­wers ques­tions and wasn’t likely to be caught on a talk show. She was also a genius, wri­ting social com­men­tary on femi­nism, racism and society while mas­que­ra­ding it as science fic­tion, yet making it genuine, bri­lliant science fic­tion and splen­did social commentary.

The pur­pose of these posts is not to give book reviews but to intro­duce or rein­tro­duce peo­ple to some women. In the case of Oli­via But­ler I was lucky enough to have been intro­du­ced to her in tenth grade English in a month long series we did on Women Wri­ters. It’s a rare thing though for Octa­via But­ler to be intro­du­ced in a high school class not par­ti­cu­lar to science fic­tion or Afri­can Ame­ri­can wri­ters, and that my friends is a shame. So for those who did miss out, check out her work.

Explo­ra­tory Links Octa­via Butler:

NPR ESSAY — UN RACISM CON­FE­REN­CEBy Octa­via E. But­ler Reflec­tions on Octa­via But­ler
offi­cial site Octa­via But­ler
Octa­via But­ler, 1947 – 2006: Sci-fi wri­ter a gif­ted pio­neer in white, male domain
Books by Octa­via E. But­ler
Oh, Octa­via

pre­viously on Women’s Week
Zai­nab Salbi
Dorothy Par­ker