Feminist SF timeline: Difference between revisions

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The [[feminist sex wars]] reach their peak in the 80s, not coincidentally at the same time that [[women's erotica]] is enjoying a boom. SF in general shows a much greater level of sexual explicitness, and [[fanfic]] gets naughty and needs a spanking.  
The [[feminist sex wars]] reach their peak in the 80s, not coincidentally at the same time that [[women's erotica]] is enjoying a boom. SF in general shows a much greater level of sexual explicitness, and [[fanfic]] gets naughty and needs a spanking.  


[[Marion Zimmer Bradley]]'s [[The Mists of Avalon]] kicks off a new thread of novels portraying [[women's spirituality]] and goddess-based religions, and also a new trend of reenvisioning histories, myths, and iconic stories from feminist or subaltern perspectives.
[[Marion Zimmer Bradley]]'s [[The Mists of Avalon]] kicks off a new thread of novels portraying [[women's spirituality]] and goddess-based religions, ultimately feeding into the New Age fiction trend.  [[The Mists of Avalon]] also initiated a popular trend of reenvisioning histories, myths, and iconic stories from feminist or subaltern perspectives.


Numerous women's presses and bookstores are founded in the 1970s with the collective energy of the feminist movement and lesbian separatists; lesbian & gay-themed lines, presses, and bookstores followed shortly thereafter.  
Numerous women's presses and bookstores are founded in the 1970s with the collective energy of the feminist movement and lesbian separatists; lesbian & gay-themed lines, presses, and bookstores followed shortly thereafter.  
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The bisexual, goth, androgynous, vampire thing picks up steam in the 80s.
The bisexual, goth, androgynous, vampire thing picks up steam in the 80s.


* [[1980]] Octavia Butler publishes Wild Seed
* [[1980]] Elizabeth Lynn publishes Northern Girl
* 1980 Kate Wilhelm publishes Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang
* 1981 Julian May publishes The Many Colored Lands (first in Pleiocene Cycle)
* 1981 New Victoria publishes WomanSpace: Future and Fantasy, Stories and Art by Women
* 1981 Elisabeth Vonarburg publishes La Silence de la Cite; translated into English in 1988 as The Silent City
* 1982 Tanith Lee publishes The Silver Metal Lover
* [[1983]] [[Marion Zimmer Bradley]] publishes [[The Mists of Avalon]]
* Mary Gentle publishes Witchbreed
[[1983]] [[Joanna Russ]] publishes [[How to Supress Women's Writing]]
* [[1984]] Suzette Haden Elgin publishes [[Native Tongue]]
* [[1984]] Marion Zimmer Bradley publishes [[Sword and Sorceress]], the first in a series of Bradley-edited anthologies in which many new writers got started, and a consistent source for stories about women (specifically, swordswomen and sorceresses).
* 1984 [[Kindred Spirits: An Anthology of Gay and Lesbian Science Fiction Stories]] Jeffrey M. Elliot publishes, with [[Alyson Press]], the first explicitly gay-lesbian themed SF anthology, reprinting GL stories from previous publications.
* [[1985]] [[Margaret Atwood]] publishes [[The Handmaid's Tale]], later made into a film and an opera
* [[1986]] Sigourney Weaver kicks ass in [[Aliens]] (dir., [[James Cameron]])
* [[1986]] Joan Slonczewski publishes [[A Door Into Ocean]]
* [[1986]] [[Gaylaxian Science Fiction Society]] formed
* [[1987]] [[Toni Morrison]] publishes [[Beloved]]
* 1987 Pamela Sargent publishes The Shore of Women
* 1987 Gwyneth Jones publishes Divine Endurance
* Octavia Butler publishes Dawn, first book of the [[Xenogenesis]] trilogy
* [[James Tiptree, Jr.]] (Alice Sheldon) dies, 1915-1987
* 1988 Carol Emshwiller publishes Carmen Dog
* 1988 C.J. Cherryh publishes Cyteen
* 1988 Sheri Tepper publishes The Gate to Women's Country
* [[Gaylaxicon]], the first GLB SF convention
* [[Lambda Literary Awards]] inaugurated, with a joint category for "mystery/sf"; award given to mystery novels.
* [[1991]] The creation of the [[James Tiptree, Jr. Award]] for SF or fantasy that explores and expands gender roles; [[Pat Murphy]] announced the creation at [[WisCon]].
* 1991 Lambda Literary Awards now split the lesbian mystery/sf category, and created a category for "Lesbian Science Fiction/Fantasy"; first Lambda for a lesbian fantasy/SF book, [[Jessica Amanda Salmonson]]'s anthology of glb supernatural fiction, [[What Did Miss Darrington See?]])
* 1991 [[Susanna Sturgis]] publishes [[Memories and Visions: Women's Fantasy and Science Fiction]] anthology
* [[1992]] [[Angela Carter]] dies
* [[1994]] First website on feminist SF (ultimately becoming http://feministSF.org ).
* [[1995]] "[[Xena: Warrior Princess]]" series premiere airs in the US (1995 Sept. 9; UK airdate, 1996 Sept. 8)
* [[1996]] (??) [[Circlet Press]] first publication of erotic, feminist SF, a chapbook called [[Telepaths Don't Need Safewords]]
* [[1997]] [[Judith Merril]] dies
* [[1997]] [[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]] series premiere in the US


= Sources & External Links =
= Sources & External Links =


* [[User:Lquilter|Laura Quilter]], 2001-2006, A Brief History of Feminist SF/F and Women in SF/F, available at http://feministsf.org/community/history.html
* [[User:Lquilter|Laura Quilter]], 2001-2006, A Brief History of Feminist SF/F and Women in SF/F, available at http://feministsf.org/community/history.html

Revision as of 09:52, 28 April 2006

A Brief History of Feminist SF and Women in SF





BF (Before Frankenstein)

SF per se did not exist, but many of the stories that were told, and eventually published, relied on fantastical premises of one sort or another, often including magical, religious, and mythical imagery, beings or events. The imagined civilization, whether it be utopian, the Kingdom of Heaven, or otherwise, cropped up here and there.

Nineteenth Century CE: After Frankenstein (1818-1919)

The early 19th century formats were still shaping and being developed. Gothic novels remained popular, with supernatural or possibly supernatural elements. Mary Shelley's Frankenstein emerged in part from this tradition.

In the mid-later part of the 19th century, a wide variety of utopian stories coming out of social and utopian movements; also many supernatural and ghost stories.

The late 19th and early 20th century saw a suffragette backlash in literature: novels in which humorless women take over the world, for good or for ill; valiant men with a sense of humor often took it right back to the satisfaction of both sexes.

The 20th Century AF: After the Great War (1920-1945)

The pulp era begins, and brings with it women writers, often writing pseudonymously or under gender-ambiguous names, such as C.L. Moore.

The 20th Century AF: After WW2 (1945-1967)

SF popularity continues to grow, and male and female writers enter the field in increasing numbers. Women still frequently write with pseudonyms or gender-ambiguous names, or pseudonymously with male writers using a male pseudonym.

In US SF, anxieties over nuclear war, Communism, and the changing roles of women during and after WW2 sometimes played out in gender-related SF. A number of "war of the sexes" stories appeared, often depicting the society run by women as a hive-like metaphor for socialism. As in the suffragette backlash, the societies run by women were authoritarian, humorless, dull, and lack creative fire and ingenuity, and they were often static or even dying societies.


Prominent new writers in the 40s include Judith Merril, Leigh Brackett and Miriam Allen deFord.


Prominent new women writers in the 50s include Katharine MacLean, Margaret St. Clair, Zenna Henderson, and Andre Norton.


Prominent new women writers in the 60s are almost too many to name here but a selection include: Marion Zimmer Bradley, Rosel George Brown, Sonya Dorman, Carol Emshwiller, Sylvia Louise Engdahl, Phyllis Gotlieb, Madeleine L'Engle, Ursula K. Le Guin, Anne McCaffrey, Naomi Mitchison, Joanna Russ, James Tiptree, Jr., Kate Wilhelm, and many others. Plus, Samuel R. Delany.

The Golden Age of Feminist SF (1968-1979)

Lesbian separatism and Gay Liberation made strong impacts on feminist SF, and the developing world of fanfic. Many more women entered the field. A feminist backlash became prominent, focusing less on hive-like socialist societies and more on lesbianism and male fears of sexual redundancy.

  • 1975 Marion Zimmer Bradley publishes The Heritage of Hastur
  • 1975 Tanith Lee publishes The Birthgrave
  • 1975 Naomi Mitchison publishes Solution Three
  • 1975 Joanna Russ publishes The Female Man
  • 1975 Robert Silverberg described James Tiptree, Jr.'s writing as "ineluctibly masculine" in the introduction to Warm Worlds and Otherwise, apparently attempting to dispel rumors that Tiptree was female
  • 1977 The first WisCon was held in Madison, Wisconsin.

Cyberpunk, "Post-Feminism", Queer Identity (1980-present)

The feminist sex wars reach their peak in the 80s, not coincidentally at the same time that women's erotica is enjoying a boom. SF in general shows a much greater level of sexual explicitness, and fanfic gets naughty and needs a spanking.

Marion Zimmer Bradley's The Mists of Avalon kicks off a new thread of novels portraying women's spirituality and goddess-based religions, ultimately feeding into the New Age fiction trend. The Mists of Avalon also initiated a popular trend of reenvisioning histories, myths, and iconic stories from feminist or subaltern perspectives.

Numerous women's presses and bookstores are founded in the 1970s with the collective energy of the feminist movement and lesbian separatists; lesbian & gay-themed lines, presses, and bookstores followed shortly thereafter.

The English-speaking world discovers magical realism, and numerous important new works are published or translated into English.

The bisexual, goth, androgynous, vampire thing picks up steam in the 80s.

  • 1980 Octavia Butler publishes Wild Seed
  • 1980 Elizabeth Lynn publishes Northern Girl
  • 1980 Kate Wilhelm publishes Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang
  • 1981 Julian May publishes The Many Colored Lands (first in Pleiocene Cycle)
  • 1981 New Victoria publishes WomanSpace: Future and Fantasy, Stories and Art by Women
  • 1981 Elisabeth Vonarburg publishes La Silence de la Cite; translated into English in 1988 as The Silent City
  • 1982 Tanith Lee publishes The Silver Metal Lover

1983 Joanna Russ publishes How to Supress Women's Writing

  • 1988 Carol Emshwiller publishes Carmen Dog
  • 1988 C.J. Cherryh publishes Cyteen
  • 1988 Sheri Tepper publishes The Gate to Women's Country
  • Gaylaxicon, the first GLB SF convention
  • Lambda Literary Awards inaugurated, with a joint category for "mystery/sf"; award given to mystery novels.

Sources & External Links