2015 and
(part of) the rave in genre is gender busting.
The space opera fare of Ann Leckie’s Anciliary Justice ignores sex in its pronouns.
Kameron Hurley’s ultra-violent samurai-Medieval fantasy The Mirror Empire inverts the standard
male-female power relationship and has a unisex warrior. And Alex Dally MacFarlane is doing her
darndest to promote the elimination
of binary gender from sf. These novels and views championed as fresh
perspectives, sometimes even ground breaking views that are revolutionizing the
way we see the world and genre, it’s as if the history of the field never
existed. But the fact the gendered
elements of Leckie and Hurley’s novels are like sprinkles on a cake—superficial
at best—is all the more concerning. Does
the modern generation of science fiction and fantasy readers truly consider
them in-depth examinations of gender and society?
Rewind to
1960 and the rave is how speculative fiction is beginning to transition from
the uber-modernism of the Silver Age into concerns more directly relevant to
civil rights issues of the day. With the
emergence of writers like Algis Budrys, Robert Sheckley, Joanna Russ, Brian
Aldiss, Harlan Ellison, Ursula Le Guin, Philip K. Dick, and others, the
concerns of the Cold War, discrimination, sexism, race, and other topics more
directly affecting people in the Western world were starting to be
addressed. Enter Theodore Sturgeon’s 1960
Venus Plus X. About a man visiting a world of humans where
the physical notion of male and female does not exist, it puts to clean shame
the contemporary conception of what a robust examination of non-gender in
fiction can be.
Less a
story and more the exploration of a concept, Venus Plus X is the “tale” of Charlie Johns and his time travel to
the world of the Lemods, written in Sturgeon’s wonderfully dynamic, chewy
prose. Brought against his will, part of
his travels amongst the benevolent people is spent trying to figure out why he
was chosen, and what his purpose there is. As he is slowly exposed to more and
more elements of Lemod society—its religion, reproductive practice, and outlook
on life—he begins to fully understand his situation. His ultimate reality, however, still comes as
a shock.
Throughout
Venus Plus X are snippets of
contemporary US life. Though circa 1960,
the vignettes nevertheless highlight the simple social issues we still deal
with on an everyday basis. The brand
names of products may have changed and the vernacular may be less ‘gee-golly’,
but the discussions continue. Indirectly
focused on gender, by the end of the novel, the snippets expand their scope to
draw in social cohesion and belief. As
Charlie Johns’ conception of the world slowly morphs out of true into the 20th
(and mostly still 21st) century contemporary perception of society and
cultural norms, so too does the reader’s perception of the snippets. Sturgeon playing deep head games, the reader
who assumes the utopian scenario laid out in detail is to be bowed down to is
in for a surprise.
Though
gender appears the main concept under exploration for the majority of the
novel, it is slowly subsumed into a larger idea, perhaps even question: how to
achieve a sustainable human future? The
Cold War well under way in 1960, one can almost feel Sturgeon probing at the
practical application of socialist and democratic theory. The punch of ultimate judgment left hanging,
the novel lingers in the mind for the interesting concepts it raises regarding
the evolution of mankind as well as what is best for mankind. Less a sense of “Ahh, that was a satisfying story.
Let’s see what’s next on the TBR pile”, the reader drifts into
rumination.
In the
end, Venus Plus X is classical
science fiction—not strictly in the temporal sense, rather for its ability to
make the reader stop, think, and perhaps reevaluate their view of the
world. Gender and human purpose the key
themes, Sturgeon highlights our foibles, creates a grand vision of how it might
be, then deconstructs it with reality, leaving the reader to mull over in their
mind what indeed they desire for themselves, those around them, and the future
of mankind. Ursula Le Guin’s The Left Hand of Darkness a more
balanced mix of ideas and storytelling, Venus
Plus X nevertheless possesses a strong conceptual drive that allows it to
rise to equal height, questions and ideas floating in the mind well after.
An excellent review! Is it coincidence that we covered the same book within four days of each other?
ReplyDeletehttp://galacticjourney.org/?p=939
It's such a rarely spoken of book, that, perhaps??
ReplyDeleteActually, just *one* day separated our reviews! Happy timing.
ReplyDeleteA lot of people like this book (particularly Fred Pohl, but also many of my readers).