Matriarchy in SF: Difference between revisions

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* [[Jayge Carr]]. ''[[Leviathan's Deep]]'' (1979)
* [[Jayge Carr]]. ''[[Leviathan's Deep]]'' (1979)
* [[Joy Chant]], ''[[When Voiha Wakes]]'' (1983) (3rd book in a trilogy)
* [[Jo Clayton]]. ''[[Irsud]]'' (1978)
* [[Jo Clayton]]. ''[[Irsud]]'' (1978)
* [[Cooper, Edmund]]. ''[[Gender Genocide]]'' (1972) (misogynistic)
* [[Edmund Cooper]]. ''[[Gender Genocide]]'' (1972) (misogynistic)
* [[Cooper, Parley J.]] ''[[The Feminists]]'' (1971) (anti-feminist. it's almost a rule: if it uses "the feminists" in the title it is critical.)
* [[Parley J. Cooper]] ''[[The Feminists]]'' (1971) (anti-feminist. it's almost a rule: if it uses "the feminists" in the title it is critical.)





Revision as of 04:22, 21 January 2010

Matriarchy is a form of society in which women hold the power. Distinct from matrilineality (families trace their lineage through the maternal side) and matrilocality (men are exogamous, moving to women's households on marriage).

Relevant SFnal works

In general, please do not include woman-only worlds in matriarchies. Every all-woman world with any government is necessarily a matriarchy.

Note: Not all works representing matriarchies are feminist; some are quite sexist.

Worlds


Titles


  • Elizabeth Bear, Carnival (see also The Ruins of Isis for a structurally similar work)
  • Thomas Berger. Regiment of Women (Simon & Schuster, 1973) (anti-feminist screed. This man (Berger) is as obsessed with the rightness of penetration by the "protuberant organ" (i swear!) as the general in "Dr. Strangelove" is obsessed with "our precious bodily fluids." -- lq, 6/11/00)
  • Anne Bishop. Dark Jewels Trilogy. (Theoretically a matriarchy, the old matriarchy is shown as corrupt; a young woman is born who will be the new Queen. Gender differences are essential & good, but women are sort of better or more powerful in some ways.)
  • Marion Zimmer Bradley. The Ruins of Isis (1978) (Isis is a matriarchy; this book is sort of like The Golden Notebook by Doris Lessing crossed with Darkover if the Free Amazons ran Darkover)
  • Gerd Brantenberg. Egalia's Daughters: A Satire of the Sexes (originally: Egalias døtre) (translated from Norwegian into English by Louis Mackay) [feminist satirical role-reversal]
  • David Brin. Glory Season (1993) [colonial world; lines of female clones run the society; a few men and non-clone women make their way in the world]











  • Mack Reynolds. Amazon Planet (1975) [Amazonia presents itself to the universe as a matriarchy, but that's really a front for the planet's actual system -- anarchist experiment with ostensible gender equality.]






Others

Films

  • "FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions" (2004; dir. Carlos Atanes) (a matriarchy governs Europe) [1]

Other suggestions

  • "Samantha Lee's 'Childe Roland' (actually set in some kind of post-disaster Scotland -- Lesley Hall)
  • something by Storm Constantine the name of which I've forgotten (could it really have been something like 'In the Mother's Country'--or was this something else entirely? -- Lesley Hall);