T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
784.1 | Silverbob also claims man will never fly | FOOZLE::BALS | I am *not* your father's Oldsmobile | Fri Apr 28 1989 11:15 | 5 |
| I think the "question" was answered for all time by Robert Silverberg's
claim in the introduction to the original edition of TEN THOUSAND
LIGHT-YEARS FROM HOME that James Tiptree was obviously male. :-)
Fred
|
784.2 | Right goofball, wrong book | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Starfleet Security | Fri Apr 28 1989 14:28 | 13 |
| re:.1
It was Tiptree's WARMS WORLDS AND OTHERWISE. More amusing given
that what tipped a lot of people off that Tiptree was female was
her story "The Women Men Don't See", which those people claimed
just couldn't possibly have been written by a man.
To answer the original question, I can't think of any story by a
female author that caused me to think, "Men wouldn't react like
that!" so I have to assume that women can write convincing male
characters.
--- jerry
|
784.3 | This is probably a personal thing, but... | HPSCAD::WALL | You and me against the world: attack! | Mon May 01 1989 11:44 | 5 |
|
Mercedes Lackey has yet to write a male character I believe, but
that's really fantasy, not SF.
DFW
|
784.4 | A good one | CSC32::MI_BAKER | | Fri May 05 1989 20:25 | 8 |
| Most female authors don't portray males as protangonists. The few
that do, do a passable job of it. One author that comes to mind is
Lois McMasters-Bujold. Her male characters are convincing enough for
me. I didn't notice any glaring obvious irregularities. She tells a
good story too. I think of any that have done poorly. There probably
are some though.
Mike
|
784.5 | some thoughts ... | RELYON::HIGINBOTHAM | SaxOphone, not SaxAphone! | Thu May 11 1989 16:04 | 14 |
|
It interests me that there is so little response going on here.
That means one of the following:
1. The women authors are doing fine jobs of portraying men.
2. Men aren't reading the female authors and thus aren't able
to respond.
3. Men aren't terribly concerned about how they are portrayed
in SF.
I have a gut feeling that #3 is the reason.
Why would this be the case? Or do you disagree with me?
Brent
|
784.6 | A vote for #3. | ATSE::WAJENBERG | Keep up the disinterested work. | Thu May 11 1989 17:27 | 29 |
| Re .5
I'll go along with 3, with a touch of 1 thrown in. In my experience,
female authors are generally better at characterization than male
authors (though the two ranges certainly overlap by a great deal). It
doesn't matter whether the characters being portrayed are men, women,
or something else.
My guess would be that men tend to read SF as adventure stories and
and place more weight on good action and clever invention than women
do, while women tend to read SF as character drama and place more
weight on style and characterization than men do. (Standard political
disclaimer: I am not saying that either sex is indifferent to the
literary values of the other, or that all individuals of either sex
evaluate literature in that way.)
To continue with the sweeping generalizations, I have the impression
that female SF authors simply take over the hardware of hyperdrives and
ETs made traditional in the mostly-male past and exercise their
inventiveness with interesting cultures, politics, and personalities.
(More power to them.) The male SF authors are the ones who keep coming
up with new technical gimmicks. If the writer is any good, he goes on
to guess at the gimmick's impact on individuals and societies; he may
even do it quite well; but the people share limelight with the gimmick.
This is, of course, the old "women focus on people, men focus on
things" idea. But it seems to me the literature supports that idea.
Earl Wajenberg
|
784.7 | How about | HAGGIS::IRVINE | I hate Boomer .008 Guage! | Fri May 12 1989 08:50 | 9 |
| This is more SFantasy but....
After the Dragon Riders series I was very impressed with Ann McAffreys
protrail of "Lord Jaxom" in the `White Dragon'. She seemed to capture
the essence of a young male in puberty, & coupled it with the Dragon
sence installed at the Impression.
Bob I
|
784.8 | | MEDIUM::CONNELLY | Desperately seeking snoozin' | Sat May 13 1989 00:13 | 34 |
| re: .5
> 1. The women authors are doing fine jobs of portraying men.
In some cases, like Cecilia Holland's _Floating Worlds_, and some of the
Kate Wilhelm stories I've read, the portrayals of males are just _alien_.
The viewpoint never gives you a clue as to what's going on inside the heads
of anyone but the female protagonist. The behavior of the males especially
seems arbitrary, unreasonable and unsympathetic in books like this. Scary
to think that men may be seen this way by significant numbers of women.
On the other hand, Ursula LeGuin frequently does male protagonists that
i can relate to (Shevek, Ai, Ged and Ramarren all come to mind). Joan
Vinge can have a female protagonist in _The Snow Queen_ but still make
the male supporting characters believable. Ditto for the author of the
_Cruiser Dreams_ series (Janet Morris?)...i could relate pretty well to
the scheming, nefarious husband that the female protagonist picks up early
on in the series and eventually comes to an accomodation with.
2. Men aren't reading the female authors and thus aren't able
to respond.
See comments under previous item.
3. Men aren't terribly concerned about how they are portrayed
in SF.
I'm concerned, but more concerned with how the protagonist, male or
female, is portrayed. I can identify with a main character that learns,
becomes empowered, and does the best that she/he can in the circumstances.
I don't like protagonists that stay helpless and ignorant. Beyond that,
the other characters should be somewhat lifelike--understandable but
still capable of surprising you, in other words.
paul
|
784.9 | I'll plead "the second"... | 3284::GRIER | mjg's holistic computing agency | Mon May 15 1989 22:49 | 8 |
| I have to plead #2. I enjoy a spot of well-written fantasy now and again,
but by and large, I prefer the "hard SF", which doesn't seem to be very
popular among the female writers. I may try the "Dragonriders" series at
some time (I held them in the same category as Chalker's "Soul Rider"
series which I did end up enjoying once I got around to reading them,) but
I suspect I'm not alone, and it's certainly not due to sexism or prejudice.
-mjg
|
784.10 | Allegeable Inc. | STRATA::RUDMAN | Defenceless,adj. Unable to attack. | Wed May 24 1989 16:59 | 19 |
| On deeper thought, I'd say it was #3--I tend to overlook "weak"
characterizations if the plot/storyline is good. This was prompted
by the mention of the Drasgonriders--some of the male characterizations
were not as strong as the female. I overlooked this aspect as the
theme and the potential of dragonriding overrode the minor flaws
I encountered.
Since I've read more books prior the entering this file most of
the title discussed were read for pure enjoyment rather than
analysis, so its tough for me to pin some of these measurements
down.
Earl, isn't it sad we find ourselves uttering more and more disclaimers
as the years wear on? Why, just this morning a radio newscaster
spoke about a fellow who "'allegedly' confessed to the murder"!
This will only get worse: "Allegedly arrested", "allegedly dead",
"allegedly authored", "allegedly out sick yesterday", ....
Don
|
784.11 | Are these both Tiptree? | JFRSON::OSBORNE | Blade Walker | Fri Jun 09 1989 15:06 | 4 |
|
Were "Houston, Houston, Do You Read?" and "The Screwfly Solution" both
by Tiptree?
|
784.12 | the first was, and I think the second also | WMOIS::B_REINKE | If you are a dreamer, come in.. | Sat Jun 10 1989 01:02 | 1 |
|
|
784.13 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Protect! Serve! Run Away! | Sat Jun 10 1989 05:59 | 4 |
| Yes, both were. "The Screwfly Solution" was originally published
under a different pseudonym, though -- "Raccoona Sheldon".
--- jerry
|
784.14 | ...but then again, how well do male authors do? | COOKIE::MJOHNSTON | MIKE.....(Dammit! Spock...) | Mon Jun 12 1989 14:20 | 30 |
|
There are a number of women authors I enjoy reading: Le Guin, MZB,
Cherryh, Morris, to name a few. As pointed out earlier in these
replies, there seems to be a large number of women writing fantasy,
which I read sparingly. Consequently, there are many women authors that
I don't care for: Norton, Wilhelm, etc. However, this is not due to
their characterizations of Men. As far as books which made me feel
uncomfortable, or situations which I felt were not on target in how a
male would react, two come to mind: 1) Many years ago I started reading
a book by Joanne Russ (?) and I cannot for the life of me remember the
name of the book; but I remember thinking at the time "Boy, has this
lady got it in for men". 2) In Cherryh's `Chanur' books, the only human
(for most of the books) was Cully. I felt that Cully's portrayal, as an
individual caught up in an almost continuous state of terror, was
contrived. From personal experience, I feel that terror is something
that gets old much quicker than one might expect, and one either tries
to do something about the situation, becomes fatalistic, or goes crazy.
(No, that's not how I got so crazy.) Others might have interpreted the
situation differently, but that was my reaction.
In many SF stories, the characters are either alien, or in situations
which are so bizarre that I wouldn't quibble with the male character's
reactions, or lack thereof.
A question which might equally well be asked is how accurately do male
SF writers do male characters, for often when I find myself questioning
a male character's motivations or responses or thought processes, the
writer is a male.
Mike
|
784.15 | | RICKS::REDFORD | Let's rathole this off-line | Mon Jun 12 1989 17:30 | 6 |
| The Russ book is probably "The Female Man". You shouldn't skip
Kate Wilhelm's books because they're fantasy, because most of
them aren't. She usually does straight SF extrapolation, eg an
immortality virus, or the perils of cloning, or wide-spread
drought in the western US.
/jlr
|
784.16 | golden oldies | LESNET::KALLIS | Time takes things. | Tue Aug 29 1989 12:13 | 24 |
| Let's go back a little:
One of the most effective writers of her period was C.L. Moore (later
wife of Henry Kuttner). Some of her best work is found in a long
out-of-print collection, _Judgement Night_ (_and other stories_).
The title story was exceptional, with much inventiveness, but when
viewed from a distance, was more a story of a pair of becoming-lovers
and their relationship (properly left with an element of imminent
tragedy, never concluded). Her "Northwest Smith" stories are the
equivalent of tone poems, but again, it's more the personal situation
than the environmwent; if you stumble across these, you'll see what
I mean.
Kuttner, husband to Catherine, was a person bubbling with technology
(with a twist, to be sure) and relatively shallow characters. When
he and she married, nearly everything from either author was a collaberation
of incredible balance. _Fury_, the novel, is an example of that,
with both some nasty technological problems (and developments) neatly
balanced with the story of someone who lives in a semi-underworld
environment who discovers he's immortal. To be sure, our knowledge
of the Solar System dates the story (set on Venus), but the concepts
don't.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
784.17 | Tiptree Award list | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Jul 12 1994 14:05 | 49 |
| The James Tiptree Jr., Award (which is presented annually to a fictional
work that explores and expands the roles of women and men) was given
this past week-end at Readercon, Seventh Edition.
Winner:
Ammonite by Nicola Griffith ("I really, really wanted to win this.")
Short List:
Ring of Swords by Eleanor Arnason
The Robber Bride by Margaret Atwood
In the Garden of Dead Cars by Sybil Claiborne
"Motherhood" by L. Timmel Duchamp
"The Other Magpie" by R. Garcia y Robertson
"Chemistry" by James Patrick Kelly
Dancing Jack by Laurie J. Marks
"Some Strange Desire" by Ian McDonald
Illicit Passage by Alice Nunn
Coelestis by Paul Park
Long List:
Crashcourse by Wilhemina Baird
X,Y by Michael Blumlein
Glory Season by David Brin
Drawing Blood by Poppy Z. Brite
"Lost Girls" by Pat Cadigan
The Rising of the Moon by Flynn Connolly
The Rainbow Man by M.J. Engh
Harm's Way by Colin Greenland
"Touching Fire" by Nicola Griffith
The Assimilation of Leah Wennover by Stephanie T. Hoppe
"Schrodinger's Cathouse" by Kij Johnson
"`Forever,' Said the Duck" by Jonathan Lethem
Songs of Chaos by S.N. Lewitt
Evolution Annie and Other Stories by Rosaleen Love
The Year the Horses Came by Mary Mackey
An Eye for Dark Places by Norma Marden
Deerskin by Robin McKinley
"The Best Years of Our Lives" by A.R. Morlan
"Liberator" by Linda Nagata
Burning Bright by Melissa Scott
"A Defense of the Social Contracts" by Martha Soukup
"The Story So Far" by Martha Soukup
A Plague of Angels by Sherri S. Tepper
Virtual Girls by Amy Thomson
Ann B.
|
784.18 | | CSOA1::LENNIG | Dave (N8JCX), MIG, @CYO | Wed Jul 13 1994 15:05 | 7 |
| So James Tiptree Jr. had an award named after her pseudonym?
How long has this award been around?
(I enjoyed her works; was saddened at her death).
Dave
|
784.19 | | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Jul 13 1994 17:26 | 8 |
| Dave,
My SWAG is three years, since this was the third time the award has
been issued.
Hey, if you're going to have an award for gender-bending....
Ann B.
|