{"id":417,"date":"2010-10-26T09:00:45","date_gmt":"2010-10-26T08:00:45","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=417"},"modified":"2010-10-26T09:00:45","modified_gmt":"2010-10-26T08:00:45","slug":"laser-guns-can-save-us-from-the-anti-pc-brigade","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2010\/10\/26\/laser-guns-can-save-us-from-the-anti-pc-brigade\/","title":{"rendered":"Laser Guns Can Save Us From The Anti-PC Brigade"},"content":{"rendered":"
SF authors: Not clones. - photo by David Kitchenham, taken from morguefile.com<\/p><\/div>\n
There’s been a lot of controversy in the world of Sci-fi books recently, over attitudes to both women and minorities.<\/p>\n
A blogger for Apex Books<\/a>
called Gustavo Bondoni wrote this piece of trolling, misogynist racefail horseshit<\/a>, ranting against
positive discrimination and the “PC” police, etc. He was referring
to those people who voiced an opinion on The Mammoth Book of Mindblowing SF<\/strong><\/a> being a mammoth book of
only white male authors. No women, no minorities… all white, all
men.<\/p>\n
One of the people he’s complaining about is the glorious Catherynne M Valente<\/a>,
a fantasy and sci-fi author and editor, whose writing I love a whole lot.
(I’ll get the recs out of the way: her World Fantasy Award
nominated, Mythopoeic Award winning
The Orphan’s Tales<\/strong> and Hugo nominated
Palimpsest<\/strong> for starters). The small snag here being that
Apex<\/strong> is the company she edits a magazine for, so people
asked her opinions of his blogpost.<\/p>\n
Now, there’s the old argument that if you’re pulling
from the Golden Age of sci-fi, most authors WERE men. But this
book isn’t only about that period, and the list of superb
female SFF authors is long and mighty. CL Moore, Ursula K. Le Guin<\/a>,
Joanna Russ, Octavia Butler, Marge Piercy… (believe me, I
could add 20 more names here with no effort). Much more if you
include Fantasy as a genre alongside it. There are 3 female SF
Grandmasters, and truly great female SF writing goes back a long
way (it’s traditional to cite Mary Shelley for
Frankenstein<\/strong>).<\/p>\n
Besides, you shouldn’t mess with sci-fi nerds, they know
math: one commenter on the Mammoth book post worked out that
even if 3 out of 4 authors were white males, and the other 1
in 4 category contained *everyone* else, there was still only
a 0.2% chance of all 21 stories being written by white guys.
This wasn’t a case of “but it’s
representative of there being genuinely no minorities in SF
writing”. The chance of that being true is something
like 0.2% depending on the actual ratios (you have to get up
to 95% white males before it even hits 50\/50).<\/p>\n
So Bondoni wrote his deliberately baiting blogpost, trying to
raise some controversy, and Cat Valente posted what she
thought of it.<\/p>\n
It turns out she’s
tired and bored, but with more swearing<\/a>:<\/p>\n
I’m not saying “ignore the bully and he’ll
go away.” Nope. Shred away. It’s what he wants,
so he can continue to feel persecuted, and very likely keep
believing that the mythical PC harpies are why he’s
not a star of page and screen. It’s fun to feel
persecuted – if you’re persecuted, it usually
means you’re right, and at the mercy of wicked souls.
It’s not actually fun to
be<\/strong> persecuted, but if you can get that feeling
while sitting at home with no one oppressing you?
Profit.<\/p>\n
He’s using us – because he knows he
can’t get the internet crowds to look at him any
other way, he simply calls us playground names. And
that’s what the phrase PC is these days –
name calling. No one who actually believes in
not intentionally hurting other humans<\/strong> uses
that phrase anymore. It’s pretty much solely
used to insist that mobs of people who don’t
look like the user are constantly beating down his
door to force him to
be nice<\/strong>. Poor f***ing baby. My heart
bleeds for you, sweetheart.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
I just wanted to give a little cheer, because I
think her whole post is excellent.<\/p>\n
Next time, Mr Bondoni, don’t pick a fight
with the woman who responded to Elizabeth Moon’s astonishing anti-Muslim
rant<\/a> by dedicating the entire next issue of
Apex magazine to only contain stories from Arab
and Muslim writers. (That issue comes out soon,
and I can’t wait).<\/p>\n
Now, we could say that picking arguments over
statistics and always demanding equal
representation is too aggressive a behaviour, that
it doesn’t help feminism or that we’d
be better off just leaving losers like Bondoni
alone. Cat’s point is that we’re all
tired of it, we’ve all seen it before, and
the arguments against positive discrimination (if
that even applied here, which I don’t think
it does) will keep coming from the poor oppressed
traditional majority.<\/p>\n