Feminist SF studies by author (B): Difference between revisions

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==BRO==
==BRO==
; [[Valerie Broege]].
; [[Valerie Broege]].
* "Women and Technology in Science Fiction: An Uneasy Alliance," in ''[[Women Worldwalkers|Women Worldwalkers: New Dimensions of Science Fiction and Fantasy]]'', edited by Valerie Broege, Lubbock: Texas Tech Press, 1985: pp. 43-58.  
* "Women and Technology in Science Fiction: An Uneasy Alliance," in ''[[Women Worldwalkers|Women Worldwalkers: New Dimensions of Science Fiction and Fantasy]]''Lubbock: Texas Tech Press, 1985: pp. 43-58.  


; [[Tonya J. Browning]]
; [[Tonya J. Browning]]

Revision as of 05:29, 13 November 2010

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z



BA

Camille Bacon-Smith.
Bacon-Smith does anthropological studies of slash fiction & sf fandom.
Mary Kay Badami.
  • "A Feminist Critique of Science Fiction." Extrapolation Volume 18, no. 1 (December 1976): pages 6-19.
Linda Badley.
  • Film, Horror, and the Body Fantastic
Barbara L. Baer
  • "Apart to the End? Women and Men -- Different Visions of Nuclear War." Commonweal v. 112 (March 22 1985), pages 167-170.
William Sims Bainbridge.
  • "Women in Science Fiction." Sex Roles v. 8 (October 1982): pages 1081 - 1093. Statistics about women in science fiction both as authors and readers.
Lani Baird and Jake Stuiver.
Anne Balsamo.
  • "Reading Cyborgs Writing Feminism." Communication Volume 10 (1988): pages 334-44.
  • Technologies of the Gendered Body: Reading Cyborg Women
Angelika Bammer.

BARR

Marleen Barr.
  • , editor. Future Females: A Critical Anthology. Bowling Green, Ohio: Bowling Green State University Popular Press, 1981.
  • and Nicholas Smith, editors. Women and Utopia: Critical Interpretations. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, 1983.
  • Oh Well, Orwell: Big Sister Is Watching Herself: Feminist Science Fiction in 1984 (May 1984) --, editor. Feminist Science Fiction. Special issue of Women's Studies International Forum Volume 7, Number 2 (1984).
  • "Immortal Feminist Communities: A Recent Idea in Science Fiction," in Death and the Serpent, edited by carl B. Yoke and Donald M. Hassler. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1985: pp. 39-47. Discussion of Motherlines by Charnas and other feminist sf.
  • "Permissive, Unspectacular, a Little Baffling: Sex and the Single Feminist Utopian Quasi-Tribesperson." in Donald Palumbo, editor, Erotic Universe: Sexuality and Fantastic Literature. New York: Greenwood, 1986. pages 185-196.
  • Alien to Femininity: Speculative Fiction and Feminist Theory. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1987. (Contributions to the Study of Science Fiction & Fantasy Series, No. 27)
  • "Feminist Fabulation; or, Playing with Patriarchy vs. the Masculinization of Metafiction." Women's Studies Volume 14, Number 2 (1987), pages 187-191.
  • and Patrick D. Murphy, eds. "Feminism Faces the Fantastic." Special issue of Women's Studies, Volume 14, Number 2 (1987).
  • "Blurred Generic Conventions: Pregnancy and Power in Feminist Science Fiction." Reproductive & Genetic Engineering v. 1 no. 2 (1988) pages 167-174.
  • "Food for Postmodern Thought." In Feminism, Utopia, and Narrative, edited by Sarah Webster Goodwin and Libby Falk Jones, pages 21-33. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1990.
  • "News from Somewhere." Science Fiction Studies, v. 17, pt. 3 (1990): pp. 401-404.
  • --. "Men in Feminist Science Fiction: Marge Piercy, Thomas Berger and the End of Masculinity" in Rhys Garnett and R. J. Ellis, eds., Science Fiction Roots and Branches: Contemporary Critical Approaches. (New York: Macmillan / St. Martin's, 1990), pp. 153-167.
  • "Review of Feminist Utopias by Francis Bartkowski." Science Fiction Studies 17 (1990): pages 401 - 404.
  • "Thelma and Louise: Driving toward Feminist SF; Or, Yes, Women Do Dream of Not Being Electric Sheep." Foundation: The Review of Science Fiction (Essex, England) v. 53 (Autumn 1991), pp. 80-86.
  • "Working at Loving: The Postseparatist Feminist Utopia." Actes du XIe colloque de CERLI, January 26-27 1990. In Eros, Science Fiction, Fantastique Aix-en-Provence: Universite de Provence, 1991. pages 179-189. about Doris Lessing, Pamela Sargent, and Joan Slonczewski.
  • Feminist Fabulation: Space / Postmodern Fiction. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 1992.
  • Lost in Space: Probing Feminist Science Fiction and Beyond. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: The University of North Carolina Press, 1993. Includes foreword by Marge Piercy.
  • "Searoad Chronicles of Klatsand as a Pathway toward New Directions in Feminist Science Fiction: Or Who's Afraid of Connecting Ursula Le Guin to Virginia Woolf?" Foundation: The Review of Science Fiction (London, England) v. 60 (Spring 1994) pages 58-67.
  • Future Females, The Next Generation: New Voices and Velocities in Feminist Science Fiction Criticism (2000)
  • and Nicholas D. Smith, editors. Women and Utopia: Critical Interpretations. Landham, Maryland: University Press of America, 1983.

BAR

Frances Bartkowski.
  • Feminist Utopias. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press, 1989.
  • "No Shadows Without Light. " Feminist Utopias. Lincoln & London : U of Nebraska P, 1989. 133-58. Comparaison of The Handmaid's Tale and L'Eugelionne (1976) by Louky Bersianik.
J. L. Bartlett
Martha A. Bartter.
  • "Science, Science Fiction and Women: A Language of (Tacit) Exclusion." Etc. v. 49 (Winter 92/93) pages 406-419.
Elaine Hoffman Baruch.
  • "'A Natural and Necessary Monster': Women in Utopia." Alternative Futures Volume 2, Number 1 (Winter 1979): pages 29-49.
  • "Dystopia Now." Alternative Futures: The Journal of Utopian Studies (Summer 1979): pages 55-67.
Nancy Topping Bazin.
  • "Women and Revolution in Dystopian Fiction : Nadine Gordimer's July's People and Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale." Selected Essays : International Conference on Representing Revolution 1989. Ed. John Michael Grafton. Carrollton, Ga. : West Georgia College, 1991. 115-27.

BE

Susanne Becker.
Elizabeth Bell and Lynda Haas.
Rebecca Bell-Metereau.
  • Hollywood Androgyny (Columbia University Press, 1985). Substantial discussions of films including "Myra Breckenridge" (1970) (pp. 162-166), "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" (1975) (pp. 178-187), and "Alien" (1980) (pp. 209-224), among many other non-sf-al films. The emphasis is on gender roles & transgender issues. Surprisingly readable and not afflicted with post-modern headache-making language. -- lq, 5/14/00
Sylvie Berard.
  • "Amazones de tir dans la SF cote femmes!" Tessera North York, Ontario, Canada. v. 15 (Winter 1993) pages 42-55. (in French)
  • Je pense "or" je suis. Discours et identite dans la SF cote femmes. D'U.K. Le Guin a E. Vonarburg. [I Think Theref[or]e I Am. Discourse and Identity in SF on the Women's Side. From U. K. Le Guin to E. Vonarburg.]. Ph.D. Dissertation, Universite du Quebec a Montreal, 1995.
  • "Qu'ouir, que lire? Gonades et derobades dans l'espace science-fictionnel." Post, # 9 (forthcoming in Autumn 1995).
Rhona J. Berenstein
Albert I. Berger.
  • "Love, Death, and the Atomic Bomb: Sexuality and Community in Science Fiction, 1935-55", Science Fiction Studies, v.8 (no. 280) (November 1981).
Arthur Asa Berger.
  • "A Personal Response to Whetmore's 'A Female Captain's Enterprise'" in Future Females: A Critical Anthology edited by Marlene S. Barr (Bowling Green State University Popular Press: 1981), pp. 162-163.
Janet Bergstrom.
  • "Androids and Androgyny." Camera Obscura: A Journal of Feminism and Film Theory (Rochester, NY), v. 15 (Fall 1986): pp. 36-65.
Jeffrey Berman.
  • "Where's All the Fiction in Science Fiction?" in Future Females: A Critical Anthology edited by Marlene S. Barr (Bowling Green State University Popular Press: 1981), pp. 164-176.
Kate Bernheimer, editor.
Alfred Bester, 1913- .
  • "Sex in the Year 2500," interview with Jeremy Hughes, In Touch for Men, July 1982. Bester discusses the gay rights movement.
Alan Bewell.
  • "An Issue of Monstrous Desire: Frankenstein and Obstetrics." The Yale Journal of Criticism, v. 2, no. 1 (Fall 1988): pp. 105-128.

BI

Regina Binder.
  • Die Maskierte Utopie: Feminismus und Science Fiction ISBN 3631487940; 171 pp.; P. Lang.
Bitch Magazine.
  • "The Past Decade Has Seen African-American Men Invade the Science Fiction Genre, But What About the Sci-Fi Sisters?"

BL

Nellie Blagden.
  • "Otherworldly Women (Women Novelists)." Life. v. 7 (July 1984), pages 112-117.

BO

Janice Bogstad.
  • Editorial: "The Science Fiction Connection: Readers and Writers in the SF Community." Janus, v. 3, no. 4 (#10): 1977, pp. 4-8.
  • with Barbara Emrys. "Science Fiction and Women's Networking." New Moon: A Quarterly Journal of SF and Critical Feminism." Winter 1981-1982: pp. 2-3, 17-19.
  • "Redressing an Internal Imbalance: Women and Science Fiction, 1965–1980", Collection Building (1993)
Frances Bonner.
  • "Towards a Better Way of Being: Feminist Science Fiction" in Imagining Women: Cultural Representations and Gender, edited by Frances Bonner, Cambridge: Polity, 1992: pp. 94-102.
  • "Review: Aliens and Others: Science Fiction, Feminism and Postmodernism." Foundation, v. 62, Winter 1994/1995, pp. 89-93.
H. Austin Booth.
  • "Women, Gender, and Cyberculture" in Choice: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries (July/August 2000) (bibliography)
Liana Borghi.
  • "Liminaliens and Others -- But Mostly Vamps, Dragons and Women's SF." in Critical Studies on the Feminist Subject ed. by Giovanna Covi (1997) (ISBN 88-86135-70-X).
Ruth Bottigheimer.
  • "Silenced Women in the Grimms' Tales: The 'Fit' Between Fairy Tales and Society in Their Historical Context."
Chantal Bourgault Du Coudray.
  • "The Cycle of the Werewolf: Romantic Ecologies of Self-Hood in Popular Fantasy." Australian Feminist Studies, v.18, n.40 (March 2003), pp. 57-72.

BRA

Marion Zimmer Bradley.
  • Writing as Miriam Gardner. "Behind the Borderline" in Ladder, Oct. 1960. Autobiographical information.
  • "Of Men, Halflings, and Hero Worship," Rochester, Texas, 1961 (private printing); Baltimore, T-K Graphics, 1973; revised in Tolkien and the Critics, edited by Neil Isaacs and Rose A. Zimbardo, Notre Dame, Indiana, and London: Notre Dame Press, 1968. [speculations on the possibly homosexual friendship between Frodo and Sam]
  • "Responsibilities and Temptations of Women Science Fiction Writers," in Women Worldwalkers: New Dimensions of Science Fiction and Fantasy, Jane B. Weedman, editor, Lubbock: Texas Tech Press, 1985: pp. 25-42.
  • "One Woman's Experience in Science Fiction," in Women of Vision, edited by Denise Du Pont, New York: St. Martin's Press, 1988: pp. 84-97.
Rosi Braidotti.

BRE

Zoe Brennan.
  • "Visions of Women, Technology and the Future in Feminist Science Fiction." Submitted by Zoe Brennan to the University of Exeter as a dissertation towards the degree of Master of Arts by advanced study in Women's Studies, September 1994. Abstract available online at http://www.ex.ac.uk/ws/Abstracts/AbBrennan.html Discusses a variety of works including Angela Carter's Heroes and Villains.
Marie Minnich Brewer.
  • "Surviving Fictions: Gender and Difference in Postmodern and Postnuclear Narrative." Discourse Volume 9 (1987): pages 37-52.

BRI

Mary T. Brizzi.
  • "The Launching Pad," in Extrapolation, v. 23, no. 1 (1982): pp. 3-4, 107.

BRO

Valerie Broege.
Tonya J. Browning

BRY

Dorothy Bryant.
  • "My Publisher / Myself." Frontiers, v. 4, 1979, pp. 35-39.
Rex Brynen.

BU

Lois McMaster Bujold and Sylvia Kelso.
Pamela Bulmer.
  • "A Call to Arms." Femizine, no. 2 (Dec. 1954): p. 7
Annette Burfoot and Susan Lord (editors)
  • Killing Women: The Visual Culture of Gender and Violence (Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2006; ISBN 0889204977)
Marily Butler.
  • "The First Frankenstein and Radical Science." TLS, April 9, 1993: pp. 12-14.

BY

Bruce Byfield.