Disability in SF: Difference between revisions
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* "[[The Girl Who Was Plugged In]]" | * "[[The Girl Who Was Plugged In]]" | ||
* "Melora" - [[Star Trek Deep Space 9 | * "Melora" - [[Star Trek: Deep Space 9]] episode. A scientist who uses a robotic exoskeleton. Her disability becomes her strength when gravity fails on the ship. "The crew welcomes Ensign [[Melora Pazlar]], a cartographer on a mission to chart the Gamma Quadrant. Melora is an Elaysian, a species from a planet with very low gravity, and because of this, she must use a wheelchair and braces to get around in "normal" conditions." | ||
* "[[That Only a Mother]]", [[Judith Merril]], short story about [[mutation]] and the effect of nuclear impact on [[genotype]]. | |||
* The [[Jenny Casey]] series, by [[Elizabeth Bear]], features a female main character with a bionic, prosthetic arm. | |||
* "Blue Champagne" by [[John Varley]] features a quadriplegic woman whose golden exoskeleton helps her use her arms and legs, and also helps her become a celebrity. | |||
* A short story about implications of a society where 75% of the people have disabilities due to genetic drift. Airships, low tech post apocalpytic scenario where disabled people actually survive. What was this story and who wrote it? | |||
[[Category:Themes and tropes]] | |||
[[category:Themes and tropes by name]] | |||
[[category:Body themes]] | |||
Latest revision as of 20:46, 22 March 2009
Some SF works that center around women and disability:
- "The Girl Who Was Plugged In"
- "Melora" - Star Trek: Deep Space 9 episode. A scientist who uses a robotic exoskeleton. Her disability becomes her strength when gravity fails on the ship. "The crew welcomes Ensign Melora Pazlar, a cartographer on a mission to chart the Gamma Quadrant. Melora is an Elaysian, a species from a planet with very low gravity, and because of this, she must use a wheelchair and braces to get around in "normal" conditions."
- "That Only a Mother", Judith Merril, short story about mutation and the effect of nuclear impact on genotype.
- The Jenny Casey series, by Elizabeth Bear, features a female main character with a bionic, prosthetic arm.
- "Blue Champagne" by John Varley features a quadriplegic woman whose golden exoskeleton helps her use her arms and legs, and also helps her become a celebrity.
- A short story about implications of a society where 75% of the people have disabilities due to genetic drift. Airships, low tech post apocalpytic scenario where disabled people actually survive. What was this story and who wrote it?