All-woman worlds encounter men: Difference between revisions
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* [[David Brin]], ''[[Glory Season]]'' - Not quite an all-woman world, but a predominantly woman world settled by feminist social experimenters, now must prepare to meet the rest of humanity. | * [[David Brin]], ''[[Glory Season]]'' - Not quite an all-woman world, but a predominantly woman world settled by feminist social experimenters, now must prepare to meet the rest of humanity. | ||
==See also== | |||
* [[Works featuring skewed gender ratios]] | |||
* [[Woman-only worlds]] | |||
* [[All-woman worlds encounter men]] | |||
* [[:Category:Works featuring female-only worlds]] | |||
[[Category:Social themes]] | [[Category:Social themes]] | ||
[[Category:Works featuring female-only worlds]] | |||
[[Category:Settings]] | |||
Revision as of 14:55, 26 March 2007
When the men come back ...
A world of all-women encounters, or is encountered by, men, for good or ill.
- Katherine Forrest. Daughters of a Coral Dawn. A race of human women leave earth to set up their own world. Eventually a ship from earth, with males & females, encounters this world.
- Joan Slonczewski. A Door into Ocean. "The 'Sharers' [all female at the outset] use advanced skills of 'lifeshaping,' a kind of genetic engineering, to manage the ecology of their ocean-covered planet. They must use all their skills, as well as the discipline of nonviolence, to repel invading traders and soldiers [mostly violent military men], without destroying their own way of life."
- Maine, Charles Eric. Alph (also published as: World Without Men (anti-feminist; an all female world finds a surviving man)
- Merril Mushroom. Daughters of Khaton. Actually, it's not exactly clear that women are reproducing parthenogenetically, or if a plant is just making babies for them. The plant definitely seems to be doing it, but somehow by taking the genetics of the women ...
- Kit Reed. Little Sisters of the Apocalypse (An island of women whose men have gone off to war must decide what to do if / when the men come back.)
- Joanna Russ. "When It Changed" (initially published: 1972, in Again, Dangerous Visions, edited by Harlan Ellison) (This was the first story published about Whileaway. In this story, Whileaway is "found" by men from Earth, who think it a tragedy that men have disappeared from the world 30-odd generations ago, and promise to rectify the situation. This story was a "dangerous vision": women have created a world and lived just fine without men; this was not a feminist utopia, but the women have done just fine and apparently not missed men at all. What kind of world do you have when you have only one sex? A world of people.
- James Tiptree, Jr. "Houston, Houston, Do You Read?" (1976) - a spaceship of men encounters a future earth populated only by women.
- David Brin, Glory Season - Not quite an all-woman world, but a predominantly woman world settled by feminist social experimenters, now must prepare to meet the rest of humanity.