Joanna Russ: Difference between revisions

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=== Nonfiction ===
=== Nonfiction ===
* "[[The Image of Women in Science Fiction]]" ([[1971]])
;Collections and book-length essays:
* ''[[How to Suppress Women's Writing]]'' ([[1983]])
* ''[[How to Suppress Women's Writing]]'' ([[1983]])
* ''[[Magic Mommas, Trembling Sisters, Puritans & Perverts: Feminist Essays]]'' ([[1985]])
* ''[[Magic Mommas, Trembling Sisters, Puritans & Perverts: Feminist Essays]]'' ([[1985]])
* ''[[To Write Like a Woman: Essays in Feminism and Science Fiction]]'' ([[1995]])
* ''[[To Write Like a Woman: Essays in Feminism and Science Fiction]]'' ([[1995]])
* ''[[What Are We Fighting For? Sex, Race, Class, and the Future of Feminism]]'' ([[1998]])
* ''[[What Are We Fighting For? Sex, Race, Class, and the Future of Feminism]]'' ([[1998]])
* ''[[The Country You Have Never Seen]]'' (forthcoming)
* ''[[The Country You Have Never Seen]]'' (forthcoming, in 2007?)
* "What Can a Heroine Do?"
;Individual and shorter titles:
* "[[The Image of Women in Science Fiction]]" ([[1971]])
* "[[What Can a Heroine Do? or Why Women Can't Write]]"
* "Images of Women"
* "Images of Women"
* "''Amor Vincit''"
* "''Amor Vincit Foeminam''"


=== Notable short fiction ===
=== Notable short fiction ===

Revision as of 18:17, 8 September 2007

Joanna Russ (born 22 February 1937), American writer, pioneer of feminist science fiction, essayist.

Biography

Grew up in the Bronx. Born to Bertha Zinner and Evarett I. Russ. BA with High Honors in English from Cornell University (1957); MFA from Yale University School of Drama (1960). Came out in 1969. Taught at Cornell, SUNY Binghamton, University of Colorado at Boulder, University of Washington (Seattle).

First published in 1959.

Bibliography

Novels

Collections

Nonfiction

Collections and book-length essays
Individual and shorter titles

Notable short fiction

  • "The Autobiography of My Mother" (1991) (first appeared in Ms. v.1, May/June 1991, pp. 54-60.
  • "Corruption" (1976) in Vonda McIntyre's Aurora: Beyond Equality.
  • "A Few Things I Know About Whileaway" in The Norton Book of Science Fiction (incorporated into The Female Man)
  • "The Little Dirty Girl" in The Armless Maiden (1995).
  • "The Man Who Could Not See Devils." (1970; reprinted in Those Who Can: A Science Fiction Reader edited by Robin Scott Wilson (1973)
  • "Russalka or The Seacoast of Bohemia" (1978) in Jack Zipes' Don't Bet on the Prince, (1987).
  • "The Second Inquisition" (1969) in Pamela Sargent's More Women of Wonder.
  • "Souls" (1982)
  • "Useful Phrases for the Tourist" in Damon Broderick's Not the Only Planet: Science Fiction Travel Stories (1998)
  • "When It Changed" (written 1969; published 1972 in The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women, 1985; and in The Zanzibar Cat, 1983; also revised & incorporated into The Female Man)
  • "The Zanzibar Cat" (1971)

Interviews

  • Interviewed by Samuel R. Delany at WisCon 30 (2006)
  • Interview in Larry McCaffery, ed., Across the Wounded Galaxies: Interviews with Contemporary American Science Fiction Writers. (1990).

References