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It's time for our monthly recs post! Usually I make this a space for members to ask for recs that interest them, but this time
oyceter and I want to do something different.
Dunno how many of you have been following the dustup over a certain pair of white SFF authors? (Briefest of summaries: one author wrote a "shiny" alternate-universe U.S. "frontier" story in which Indians never existed and the U.S. never had slavery; she also characterized that as a history that wouldn't be "wildly divergent". Another author made statements that, among other things, imply that POC are new to SFF.) Notice, please, that this isn't a post about the two authors: we don't write posts about white authors on this comm.
Given that we don't write posts about white authors, here's the reason I'm even bringing up that hot mess: while browsing nahrat's link round-ups, I've been noticing that now and again someone asks for recs of books that give the lie to the assumptions those two authors made. Unfortunately, the rec-making has been a bit thin, and sometimes is pretty heavily tilted toward white authors.
Happily, reccing POC authors is something this comm does really well. Let's make some recs! I'd like to see recs for the following:
Additionally, here are two existing POC-author rec-making posts in the discussion:
ETA: I set up some category-specific comment threads below, but if you've got something that needs to be rec'd and the categories seem to be too constraining, DO feel free to ignore the categories. The recs are the important thing here, not the categories.
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Dunno how many of you have been following the dustup over a certain pair of white SFF authors? (Briefest of summaries: one author wrote a "shiny" alternate-universe U.S. "frontier" story in which Indians never existed and the U.S. never had slavery; she also characterized that as a history that wouldn't be "wildly divergent". Another author made statements that, among other things, imply that POC are new to SFF.) Notice, please, that this isn't a post about the two authors: we don't write posts about white authors on this comm.
Given that we don't write posts about white authors, here's the reason I'm even bringing up that hot mess: while browsing nahrat's link round-ups, I've been noticing that now and again someone asks for recs of books that give the lie to the assumptions those two authors made. Unfortunately, the rec-making has been a bit thin, and sometimes is pretty heavily tilted toward white authors.
Happily, reccing POC authors is something this comm does really well. Let's make some recs! I'd like to see recs for the following:
- Alternate histories or universes that are indigenous-centric and/or anti-colonialist. There is no need for the AH/AU to focus on the Americas, and I'd love to see recs that don't.
- Books that oppose the notion of an Empty Continent -- again, books can focus on either of the Americas, Australia, Africa, or anywhere else that has had to deal with that lie.
- Books about how indigenous peoples have been an integral part of shaping the history of the world, and aren't just optional background scenery.
- Books which document and/or demonstrate that POC have a long history with SFF, or a history that's independent of the Verne/Heinlein/Asimov/Campbell anglophone tradition.
Additionally, here are two existing POC-author rec-making posts in the discussion:
ithiliana: Some of my favorite American Indian authors
"Feel free to suggest other writers! Please!"- Bangla at
deadbrowalking
"So several of the Desi folks commenting on the Global Represent thread have mentioned reading genre fiction in Bengali. Who are the authors you recommend? What's been translated to English or other languages?"
ETA: I set up some category-specific comment threads below, but if you've got something that needs to be rec'd and the categories seem to be too constraining, DO feel free to ignore the categories. The recs are the important thing here, not the categories.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-13 08:03 pm (UTC)I suspect this might better fit under "shaping the world", but I've only read the first chapter yet -- entitled "Not Just Pyramids, Explorers, and Heroes" -- and it very much fits under "not an empty continent."
Acuña begins by debunking the phrase "New World," then moves on to discussing world systems, independent cradles of civilization (two in the Americas!), and the ancient dispersal of humanity into the Americas (including the possibility of back-migration into Asia via the Bering land bridge). He then runs through a description of a handful of the numerous Mesoamerican civilizations: Olmeca, Maya, Teotihuacan, Tolteca, Tarasco, and Azteca.
I came away from this chapter with a clear sense that history in the so-called New World is old and deep, and isn't just some random footnote to "real" history.