Science, Myth, and Spirits: Re-inventions of Science Fiction by Women of Colour Writers, Between Africa, Europe and the Caribbean

Eleanor Drage
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Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper explores the way in which women of colour writers are changing the face of science fiction (sf), both by their mere presence within the genre and through the hybridisation of ‘hard science’ fiction with spirituality, mythology and indigenous scientific literacies from Africa and the Caribbean. The methodology adopted in this paper is a textual analysis of literary and visual media, with specific focus on the geographical, historical and cultural contexts of these texts and of the narrative traditions from which they emerge. Focusing on Jamaican-born Canadian writer Nalo Hopkinson’s Brown Girl in the Ring (1998), British-Jamaican author Jennifer Marie Brissett’s ‘Kamanti’s Child’ (2016), and Kenyan writer and director Wanuri Kahiu’s short-film Pumzi (2009), I will argue that global variations on the genre are correcting myopic understandings of what sf looks like, both as a ‘science’-forward branch of speculative fiction and as a traditionally white/male discipline. The result is a healthy genre re-brand, in which mythology and spirituality is set against a backdrop of technology to specifically stress the relevance of women of colour in the future.
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科学、神话和精神:非洲、欧洲和加勒比地区有色人种女性作家对科幻小说的再创造
本文探讨了有色人种女性作家改变科幻小说(sf)面貌的方式,既通过她们在这一类型中的存在,也通过“硬科学”小说与灵性、神话和来自非洲和加勒比地区的本土科学素养的混合。本文采用的方法是对文学和视觉媒体进行文本分析,特别关注这些文本的地理、历史和文化背景,以及它们产生的叙事传统。以牙买加出生的加拿大作家纳洛·霍普金森的《棕色女孩》(1998年)、英国裔牙买加作家詹妮弗·玛丽·布里塞特的《卡曼蒂的孩子》(2016年)和肯尼亚作家兼导演瓦努里·卡尤的短片《Pumzi》(2009年)为重点,我将论证这一类型的全球变化正在纠正人们对科幻小说的短视理解,无论是作为科幻小说的“科学”分支,还是作为传统的白人/男性学科。其结果是一种健康的类型重塑,其中神话和灵性被设置在技术背景下,特别强调有色人种女性在未来的相关性。
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