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niyad

(113,215 posts)
Sat Jul 30, 2022, 01:59 PM Jul 2022

The end of men: the controversial new wave of female utopias

The end of men: the controversial new wave of female utopias


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‘Authors were captivated by the idea of women hiking alone’ … A woman stands in Death Valley. Photograph: Jordan Siemens/Getty Images

There have been many novels that imagine a world without men – but are these books reductive or freeing?
Sandra Newman
Wed 25 May 2022 03.00 EDT
Last modified on Wed 25 May 2022 03.02 EDT

All the men are gone. Usually this is conceived as the result of a plague. Less often, the cause is violence. Occasionally, the men don’t die and the sexes are just segregated in different geographical regions. Or men miraculously vanish without explanation. Left to themselves, the women create a better society, without inequality or war. All goods are shared. All children are safe. The economy is sustainable and Earth is cherished. Without male biology standing in the way, utopia builds itself. I’m describing a subgenre of science fiction, mostly written in the 1970s-90s. It was once so popular it was almost synonymous with feminist SF. In 1995, when the Otherwise Award, a literary prize for “works of science fiction or fantasy that expand or explore one’s understanding of gender”, gave five retrospective awards, four of the works were set in such worlds: Suzy McKee Charnas’s Motherlines and Walk to the End of the World, and Joanna Russ’s The Female Man and When It Changed. The fifth was Ursula K Le Guin’s The Left Hand of Darkness, about a world whose inhabitants are all of the same sex.


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Ursula K Le Guin. Photograph: Bettmann/Bettmann Archive

Recently there has been a revival of the genre in radically different form, with titles including Lauren Beukes’s 2020 novel Afterland, Christina Sweeney-Baird’s 2021 thriller The End of Men, and my own new release, The Men. I think the way that these contemporary novels diverge from their earlier counterparts tells us something useful about gender politics in the 21st century. Part of the story, too, is a growing opposition to the basic premise, a conflict in which my novel has been recently embroiled.


The women-only utopia has a modest prehistory, going back to the myth of the Amazons and early feminist works such as Christine de Pizan’s 1405 The Book of the City of Ladies. But in its strict form as a single-sex utopia, it begins with Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s Herland of 1915. Here, in an uncharted and unspecified wilderness, three male explorers stumble on a plateau the local “savages” fear as a realm from which no man returns. With their aeroplane, they are able to land there, and are instantly taken prisoner by the all-female inhabitants. The book then becomes a tour of the features of the women’s ideal society.


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Herland by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Photograph: The Women’s Press
. . . . . .





I believe there’s something potently transformative about utopian fiction. Too many of us now are trying to make a political revolution without hope. Our narratives of justice are all about punishment. We squabble about what constitutes punching up or punching down, but are poor in solutions that don’t involve punching. In our art, we don’t imagine better worlds, only more and grimmer apocalypses, and the people in them only long for the patriarchal world order that gives us supermarkets, indoor plumbing and hormone patches.
. . . .

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2022/may/25/sandra-newman-female-utopian-fiction

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MuseRider

(34,104 posts)
1. I remember some of that
Sat Jul 30, 2022, 02:07 PM
Jul 2022

but never really thought about it because we were not really free yet, hoping for that which we never got but we did touch the sky in some ways for a short time. I am tired of reading so many books where the balance is never even close to even for us.

niyad

(113,215 posts)
2. I wonder what the books will look like that talk about this insane, woman-hating time here, and
Sat Jul 30, 2022, 02:18 PM
Jul 2022

around the world.

MuseRider

(34,104 posts)
3. Hard to think about.
Sat Jul 30, 2022, 02:23 PM
Jul 2022

I think I have no freaking idea what to even think of this yet. I KNOW, lived through it before but to see this again, I just cannot seem to wrap my head around it.

niyad

(113,215 posts)
4. Naively, when we lived through it the first time, I seriously thought that society was capable of
Sat Jul 30, 2022, 02:28 PM
Jul 2022

evolving. Seems I was wrong.

MuseRider

(34,104 posts)
5. Well I think this may be my problem
Sat Jul 30, 2022, 02:42 PM
Jul 2022

now that you mention it. I am finding it hard to think there IS any way around this. The way things are set against us makes it hard to want to experience all the pain and grief and frustration and anger again. I will but I am almost feeling too tired but then I have a 5 year old granddaughter and I want her to be free so, after I get my health stuff all taken care of I will be back in the game but right now I just cannot so I think....that is NOT a good thing.

I remind myself, we did it here for LGBTQ+ and I was a big part of that. It was hard, sad, maddening, scary and everything bad but when you find yourself working with people you love it becomes necessary for you to keep on not just for them but for yourself as well. We did it and it is still going. In this state they said it could not be done. So, that does give me some hope. I sure hope there are some younger women ready to take over the hard parts. I do not think I have it in me to do all that again. LOL!

I am almost too angry to even let myself think about this at length. I need to settle down and get with it.

niyad

(113,215 posts)
7. Absolutely nothing wrong with that. What you were discussing was kind of
Sun Jul 31, 2022, 02:11 PM
Jul 2022

the whole point about the hertopias.

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