Canon by Format and Title

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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

An offworld anthropologist must discover how the women of planet GP continue to reproduce after a virus kills all the men.

Men use near-future reproductive technology to control women.

A challenging saga of mothers and daughters.

The complex story of an alternate-history Joan of Arc. Published in the U.S. as four books, A Secret History et seq.

  • The Disappearance by Philip Wylie

The opposite sex vanishes.

A female android wanders a matriarchal post-apocalyptic land.

Nuclear holocaust alters male-female relations.

  • Egalia's Daughters: A Satire of the Sexes by Gerd Brantenberg

(a.k.a. Daughters of Egalia) Biological differences between men and women prove female superiority.

The battle of the sexes becomes literal war.

Men and women must live apart to ensure human survival.

A near-future theocracy systematically dehumanizes women.

Three male explorers discover an isolated all-female society.

On the planet Gethen, gender does not exist...most of the time.

A race of technologically advanced superwomen inhabits the hollow Earth.

Oppressed women invent their own language.

As America descends into barbarism, a woman founds a new religion.

A mysterious woman polarizes reactions in nineteenth-century America.

The first novel focusing on the Renunciates, or Free Amazons of Darkover (collected with its sequels in The Saga of the Renunciates).

(a.k.a Trouble on Triton) In a future of dazzling diversity, one man becomes a woman.

  • Venus Plus X by Theodore Sturgeon

The only way to end the war between the sexes is to replace both men and women with a new sex.

Enslavement of women leads to war—and more shocking acts.

Humans encounter an alien race trapped by its own sexuality.

A contemporary woman visits a future of true sexual equality.

Essential Short Fiction

New reproductive imperatives engender profound sexual alienation.

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.

Men are extinct and society is perfect.

When menstruation is eliminated, women take over the world.

One woman's words are so powerful, a Constitutional Amendment is passed to silence her.

A housewife experiences entropy.

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.

Men respond to a woman with a crucial difference.

Aliens interfere with the human reproductive drive, to deadly effect for both sexes. (First published under the byline Raccoona Sheldon.)

Aliens observe male-female mating rituals.

A lost extrasolar colony is rediscovered by Earthmen centuries after plague killed all the male colonists.

Life with unknown aliens is better than life with men.

Essential Anthologies and Collections

Reprints many Tiptree Award winners and finalists.

This indispensable collection contains several classic feminist-SF stories.

Women find within themselves the freedom and power denied by society.

  • The Start of the End of It All by Carol Emshwiller*

Eighteen incisive stories about women, men, animals, and aliens.

In an estranged future, men and women live apart.

Collects twenty stories from thirty years of insightful science-fictional examination of women's roles and issues.

  • Women of Wonder: The Classic Years: Science Fiction by Women from the 1940s to the 1970s and Women of Wonder: The Contemporary Years: Science Fiction by Women from the 1970s to the 1990s edited by Pamela Sargent

This definitive two-volume historical overview collects short SF written by women.