In
the context of its era, the work of James Tiptree Jr. was a slap in the face of
mainstream sf. Openly challenging a
number of traditions, from gender roles to the context of male authority, to
say she was influential on the current group of texts expressing similar
opinions on many of the same issues would be to put it lightly. In most of these texts, however, the
influence is only indirect; there are similarities in ideology but often
nothing more concrete ties the works together.
With Carolyn Ives Gilman’s 2015 Dark
Orbit, however, the antecedent is clear.
A
case wherein a writer uses ideas and capabilities to expand upon what has come
before, Dark Orbit is not mere
imitation Tiptree, however. Examining
identity, emotions vs. logic, gender treatment, response to
Otherness/alien-ness, and a couple other significant areas, Gilman blunts the
paranoia of Tiptree Jr. by better blending presentation with setting and
character. A certain melancholy still
pervades (starting with the title), but Gilman’s novel is more introspective
and open to possibilities, something that Tiptree Jr.’s work can rarely be
described as.
Sara
is a Waster, an exoethnologist who has given up a normal life—roots, home,
family, etc.—to travel the universe for work.
Arriving at base at the beginning of Dark
Orbit, she’s reluctant to take the assignment she’s offered. A new planet has been discovered, but appears
void of life—uninteresting for an exoethnologist. But what ultimately hooks her is: she’s asked
to tail a crew member. The mix of
political and scientific interest pulling Sara in, she is soon she on her way
to Iris with a small but select group.
Arriving on planet, a surprise awaits: her target completely disappears
in its mirror-like forests.
Thora
is the person Sara has been assigned to track in secret. Her portion of the narrative related in
journal entries, the reader is privy to in-depth questions and ideas regarding
her situation. Not only reflections on
the failures of her previous expeditions, but also observations as an explorer
in the new one on Iris, as the narrative progresses, the story of her
disappearance also transpires. With Sara
also acting as an observer, much of the novel is bound up in thoughts and
feelings regarding existence in a foreign culture—not so much the details of
the culture, rather individual perspective and reaction to it, and the
questions regarding personal identity it induces. This being the core of the
novel, Dark Orbit really gets inside
the heads of its two main characters, giving the reader deep characters as well
as interesting material to chew over.
In
the end, Dark Orbit is a novel that
engages on several key fronts. The
sci-fi elements are at times intriguing for the inherent mysteriousness. The characters are multi-faceted, with
particular focus on the internalized reaction to the alien situations they
face. Gilman’s prose is deceivingly
rich—much the same as Tiptree’s. And the
ideological touchpoints cover a number of personal areas clustered around
identity and one’s relationship to the internal and external worlds. Readers who overlooked the novel amidst the
slew of 2015 releases would do well to go back and take a look, as if it is not
nominated for the Tiptree Award, I will be shocked.
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