Canon by Format and Title: Difference between revisions

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* "All My Darling Daughters" by [[Connie Willis]] - New reproductive imperatives engender profound sexual alienation.
* "All My Darling Daughters" by [[Connie Willis]] - New reproductive imperatives engender profound sexual alienation.
* "Baby You Were Great" by [[Kate Wilhelm]] - In this proto-cyberpunk classic, a woman is used and abused to broadcast emotion to the masses [available online].
* "Baby You Were Great" by [[Kate Wilhelm]] - In this proto-cyberpunk classic, a woman is used and abused to broadcast emotion to the masses [available online].
* "A Birthday" by [Esther M. Friesner]] - Scary dystopia extracts a grim price for abortion.
* "A Birthday" by [[Esther M. Friesner]] - Scary dystopia extracts a grim price for [[abortion]].
* "[[Consider Her Ways]]" by [[John Wyndham]] - Men are extinct and society is perfect.
* "[[Consider Her Ways]]" by [[John Wyndham]] - Men are extinct and society is perfect.
* "Even the Queen...." by [[Connie Willis]] - When menstruation is eliminated, women take over the world.
* "Even the Queen...." by [[Connie Willis]] - When menstruation is eliminated, women take over the world.

Latest revision as of 06:45, 22 April 2008

Canon by Format and Title - by Cynthia Ward. This was a list assembled by Cynthia Ward for The Internet Review of Science Fiction. (cf. "Feminist SF: Futures for Humankind"). It is organized by format (novel, short form, anthology) and title. Authors marked with an asterisk (*) are essential feminist SF authors, and most or all their SF is relevant.

Essential Novels

Essential Short Fiction

  • "All My Darling Daughters" by Connie Willis - New reproductive imperatives engender profound sexual alienation.
  • "Baby You Were Great" by Kate Wilhelm - In this proto-cyberpunk classic, a woman is used and abused to broadcast emotion to the masses [available online].
  • "A Birthday" by Esther M. Friesner - Scary dystopia extracts a grim price for abortion.
  • "Consider Her Ways" by John Wyndham - Men are extinct and society is perfect.
  • "Even the Queen...." by Connie Willis - When menstruation is eliminated, women take over the world.
  • "The Forbidden Words of Margaret A." by L. Timmel Duchamp - One woman's words are so powerful, a Constitutional Amendment is passed to silence her.
  • "The Heat Death of the Universe" by Pamela Zoline - A housewife experiences entropy.
  • "Houston, Houston, Do You Read?" by James Tiptree, Jr. - Timewarped astronauts find themselves in a future in which they, being men, are obsolete.
  • "My Lady Tongue" by Lucy Sussex - A near-future women-only community engenders prejudices of its own.
  • "The Logistics of Carthage" by Mary Gentle - Those who write history stunt identity. Set in the world of The Book of Ash.
  • "Motherhood, Etc." by L. Timmel Duchamp - Men respond to a woman with a crucial difference.
  • "The Screwfly Solution" by James Tiptree, Jr. - Aliens interfere with the human reproductive drive, to deadly effect for both sexes. (First published under the byline Raccoona Sheldon.)
  • "The View from Venus" by Karen Joy Fowler - Aliens observe male-female mating rituals.
  • "When It Changed" by Joanna Russ - A lost extrasolar colony is rediscovered by Earthmen centuries after plague killed all the male colonists.
  • "The Women Men Don't See" by James Tiptree, Jr. - Life with unknown aliens is better than life with men.

Essential Anthologies and Collections