t-shirt – Bad Reputation A feminist pop culture adventure Mon, 06 Jun 2011 08:00:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.6 37601771 Found Feminism: “What Science Fiction Means” /2011/06/06/found-feminism-what-science-fiction-means/ /2011/06/06/found-feminism-what-science-fiction-means/#comments Mon, 06 Jun 2011 08:00:50 +0000 http://www.badreputation.org.uk/?p=5894 This image has been shown widely on the internet for a few weeks, but I keep coming back to it.

I think I want it on my bedroom wall, maybe a metre or two high.

An illustration of a young girl standing on a flying shark, in space. She is holding a ray gun and a sword, and the shark is firing a laser which has been mounted on its head. There is a sense of them flying at great speed, and the girl is laughing or shouting joyfully. Drawn by artist Egypt Urnash.

'What Science Fiction Means' - copyright Egypt Urnash

Fantastic artist Egypt Urnash drew this for free, as a “t-shirt design for a college SF club”. It was then linked to by Major Internet Deity Warren Ellis, who knows groovy stuff when he sees it, and subsequently the design is now selling as framed art prints and t-shirts.

Why do I love this so much?

Possibly because it could have been titled “What I want to be when I grow up” (and still apply to me and most of Team BadRep now, if we’re honest). It has a shark with a frickin’ laser on its head, which is always good for +10 points, but it’s got to be the sheer joy on the girl’s face. I think I just have an innate love of anything which could legitimately have the caption “YEAH BABY, YEAH!”

At a time when women seem to be shockingly under-represented in Sci-fi (way beyond the ratio of actual female authors to male) and hearty debate on whether that’s because of sexism or other factors, I’m delighted at anything which tells young women they have a central place in SF. (The first link references Joanna Russ’ “How to suppress women’s writing”, which we mentioned ourselves recently.)

Women of all ages should be holding the rayguns and riding the space-sharks, dammit. After all, WisCon (‘the World’s leading feminist science fiction convention’) has just finished, and once again shows the potential of the genre not only to excite and speak to everyone, but to be a blank slate where current prejudices don’t have to be brought along. SF could be a feminist’s best friend.

Egypt’s site here contains the full-size original, as well as other Awesome Art which you should go and look at.

  • Found Feminism: an ongoing series of images, videos, photos, comics, posters or excerpts – anything really, which shows feminist ideas at work in the everyday world. What’s brightened your day? Share it here – send your finds to [email protected]!
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