Women of Other Worlds

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Merrick, Helen and Tess Williams. Women of Other Worlds: Excursions through SF and Feminism. University of Western Australia Press (December 1999).

Edited anthology of criticism. Editors Helen Merrick and Tess Williams.

Essays from Australian feminist sf critics

Table of Contents

Excerpt from The freedom maze by Delia Sherman (fiction) (p. 295);

  • "Hush my mouth" by Suzette Haden Elgin (fiction) (p. 309);
  • "The onion skin theory of identity, the paint pot theory of gender, and the Blu-tack theory of position" by Rosaleen Love (p. 319);
  • "The universe of things" by Gwyneth Jones (fiction) (p. 329);
  • "Illusion and expectation: the baking of a science fiction award" by Pat Murphy (p. 342);
  • "Ideologically labile fruit crisp" by Eileen Gunn (recipe & commentary) (p. 351);
  • "Tiptree stories" by Justine Larbalestier (p. 355);
  • "The Marianas Islands" by Karen Joy Fowler (fiction) (p. 370);
  • "Letterspace: in the chinks between published fiction and published criticism" by Lois McMaster Bujold and Sylvia Kelso (p. 383);
  • "Dvorzjak symphony" by Candas Jane Dorsey (fiction) (p. 410);
  • "She undoes" by Greer Gilman (fiction) (p. 419);
  • "Better to have loved: exerpts from a life" by Judith Merril (biography) (p. 422);
  • Supplementary bibliography: Select list of additional critical resources on feminist SF (p. 443);
  • Selected list of feminist SF (p. 462)

Editions

University of Western Australia: 1999 ISBN 1-876268-32-8 Paperback rrp $29.95

Publisher's blurb

"Science fiction is our society's literature of visualization. The blueprint of our imagining creates the structure of the future, whether we visualize it as repeating familiar patterns or full of new possibilities. And for feminists science fiction offers the space to imagine what new institutions, relationships and culture might look like... Feminist science fiction is a rich space at the intersection of popular literature and feminist thought, where extraordinary other worlds are imagined by writers such as Ursula Le Guin and Joanna Russ. Women of Other Worlds examines this phenomenon, collecting work from all aspects of feminist SF - fiction, poetry, criticism, fan-writing, even a recipe. It presents an international sampler of a vibrant and challenging form of contemporary women's writing." (from the blurb about the book)