Sunday, 10 February 2008

first carnival of feminist science



First Carnival of Feminist Science Fiction and Fantasy Fans

Ragnell the Foul, vainly and ridiculously wearing all of available

Lady Monster traits for this event, adjusts her twin-tailed red and

white striped jacket underneath her borrowed wings. She perches her

tophat on the mass of hand-me-down snakes between her vintage antlers,

and hops onto a makeshit, outdoor stage. She clutches a shiny new

brass-tipped cane in her shiny new brass-clawed hands and before you

have a chance to ponder the symbolism of this artifically amalgamated

abomination, she speaks.

Step right up, folks, step right up. Welcome to the First Edition of

the Carnival of Feminist Science-Fiction and Fantasy Fans! We have a

lovely show today, full of many fine writers and a few artists!

First up, the featured fight of the evening: Magical Goth Princess

Pretty Karen vs. the Giant Robot of WEEE. Enjoy!

Our next act, Kalinara, takes us Where No Woman Has Gone Before:

One thing though, I was always disappointed in the treatment of

women. I mean Deanna Troi? She was there to bang male aliens like

Riker did the women, but with idiotic babble about romance instead.

And Beverly Crusher's main purpose was to be the

will-they/won't-they love interest for Captain Picard.

And Raqua gives us something "for all female Star Trek fans, because

most of the time, we never get what we want on the show."

In an old Looking to the Stars column, Matt Morrison offered the

following send-up of "Get Your Girlfriend into Comics" articles:

Now, I know there are some people out there who may object to the

idea that you should enter any relationship looking at the other

person as a fixer-upper opportunity. They'll tell you that

attempting what I describe here makes you no better than those

women who clip articles like "How To Trick Your Man Into Taking You

To The Opera" out of Cosmo. But let me tell you something. Most of

these people are alone and unhappy, so who are you going to

believe?

Breena Ronan shows a Must See Video, then relates it to video-game

genderbending:

After listening to Joss, I have to make the connection between his

comment that strong women characters are valuable for men as well

as women, and the phenomenon of men taking on female avatars when

they are gaming. For some reason, research shows that women gamers

rarely switch genders when gaming. Because games are so populated

by male avatars, women frequently play games with male avatars ,

but when given the choice they rarely choose gender bending.

For those of you who skipped watching the video and went straight to

the text, Mr. Loodyvillanopolis kindly transcribes that speech for you

and the Divine Goat has made livejournal icons out of the highlights!

And now, I must pause for some important information. Those of you who

are unfamilar with the basic tenants of Feminism (which makes me

wonder how found your way to this tent) are welcome at the show.

Browse at your leisure, but I must caution you against pestering the

performers unecessarily. They do not suffer fools lightly. There are

simply too many fools to waste the time with them! Karen, after

finding herself surrounded by pests, offers this helpful primer for

anyone interested in actual discussion. For those who aren't

interested in anything worthwhile and simply wish to be annoying, she

has a few words:

I am profusely irritated that such clarification is necessary, but

I shall point out that this isn't Feminism 101. Nor is it a place

to whine about how feminists want to take over the world / they've

already taken over the world / men are raped TOO! / you can't get a

date.

This is a place for pointing out sexism in comics with white-hot

rage and acid-tongued venom. I am not required to explain feminist

principles, theory, or aims to you, much less endeavour to wearily

soothe your ego while I explain that I don't hate men. I am not

obliged to do your homework for you.

Unsure why the lady in the previous booth is so angry? Well, next up

is a gentleman who might be able to clue you in:

Recent discussions about objectification of women in comics have

tended to bring up the corollary question of whether men are

equally objectified in comics, and if that isn't "just as bad." I

think we've all seen the remixed covers by now that feature the

Green Lantern's Power Battery among other heroes' attributes. Alas,

it is but a dream, a hoax, an imaginary story. Truly it takes more

than spandex over muscles to bring the objectification even close

to in line with the way that women are presented by default (two of

the most important words to remember in discussions such as this)

on the comics cover/page.

Jeff tears down The Realism Defense:

In addition to simply being glossed over, all of these examples of

sexism in RPGs also get defended by portraying critics as valuing

"political correctness" over "realism," a defense that's especially

pernicious because it goes outside the game to make claims about

the world in general.

Over towards the ADD Theater, Shannon sounds off on would-be "allies":

The idea that we somehow need 'allies' that can only be satisfied

if we are silent drives me batty. The whole point of allies is to

stand up for people when they are exhausted from dealing with the

issues or talking among their group to help soften attitudes.

Tekanji takes us through the ups and downs of gender in the CG movie

Ark:

So, I finally got around to watching the movie Ark today. The first

half hour or so got me really excited. The rest... well, let's just

say that the movie could have benefitted from an education

regarding Women in Refrigerators.

The rest of the article is cut for massive spoilers that will ruin

your ability to ever watch this movie if you read them. That being

said, if you have already seen the movie or never intend to see it,

please read on.

Behind this curtain, you see 100 Little Dolls contained in one woman!

Note that they speak in unison as they respond to an article on female

gamers:

One of the main points of his article is "that the majority of

games we play don't enforce sexual stereotype, gender biases or

sexist principles"--that rather, instead, our conceived notions

that video games are just for guys has been fed continuously by the

media. True enough that the media treats geek girls as anomalies,

but are the majority of the games out there asexual (?), or rather,

unbiased, instead of being in favor of men and masculinity?

Moving along, take note of the Aquarium. Inside, you'll find the

Amazing Drama Turtle questioning the Feminist_Fandom livejournal

community as to personality differences between male and female

villains.

Diagonal to the Aquarium, Alianne ponders the complexity of villains:

Well, I've never really been content with most non-anime cartoons

because the villains in most of them are evil simply because they

are. There is no complexity involved and reality isn't that simple.

Take the story snow white, for example. The evil stepmother decides

to do away with the princess because said princess is prettier? I

mean, come on! What happened to them killing the current heir to

get the throne for themselves. That reason, I would have accepted

but for something as superficial as beauty? Evil for the sake of

having someone to be evil.

Over in the concessions area, you'll see comics artist Lea Hernandez

generously offer four grants to talented female webcomickers:

In order to foster women publishing independently, with economy,

and as owners of what they create, I will award FOUR grants

annually, of a year's free hosting at WebComicsNation.com, to women

making a regularly-updating new or existing webcomic of any genre

or style.

The recipients will have unlimited data storage and bandwidth, the

ability to choose to support their work with ads, and a storefront

for selling merchandise.

In response to criticism of this gesture, you can see a defense by

fellow artist Colleen Doran, along with a little personal information

on how she got into reading and drawing comic books,

As longer as we're looking at professional comic book creators here,

earlier this month writer Gail Simone weighed in with her views on

Fan-Fiction.

In an exhibit with no actual man-on-man action (I'm sure those of us

seeking it know where to find by now, though -- this is the Internet

after all), Lis Riba muses on yaoi/slash fanfic written by women for

women.

Jess McCabe is reading an erotic graphic novel with an interesting

premise:

The book concerns Dorothy (from the Wizard of Oz), Alice (in

Wonderland) and Wendy (from Peter Pan) - all grown up, the three

characters meet in a hotel and embark on a sexual adventure. Part

of this involves retelling their stories - the ones we are all so

familiar with - as tales of sexual awakening.

Jenn finds a dismissive reaction to her criticism of a truly worrisome

new comic book character:

I was incredibly disheartened to read this treatment of the

criticizing voice of the Great Ten. This paragraph ignored the bulk

of the criticism, which has been levelled primarily at the

characters of Thundermind and Mother of Champions. The use of the

phrase "mislabelled as a misogynistic creation" and the sentence

referring to MOC as a Divine Mother archetype not only makes it

sound like critics like me who firmly believe MOC to be a sexist

caricature are speaking out of our asses (i.e. haven't done any

research) but suggests that we couldn't possibly have said anything

worth repeating.

Here's a basic single-issue comic book plot:

GA #54, the short version: Green Arrow and Black Lightning are

looking for evil Doctor Light. Evil Dr. L. is conveniently only a

few blocks away attacking Kimiyo Hoshi, the good Doctor Light. Evil

Dr. L steals Kimiyo's powers and flies off cackling. Green Arrow

finds Kimiyo in the hospital and is attacked by Mirror Master and

Killer Frost, and runs off to fight them. Kimiyo is left bleeding

on the floor and never seen again.

Except for the last line (which in a serial medium like comics

happens), it doesn't sound so bad, right? But a brief synopsis takes

quite a bit out of the execution. Marionette explains exactly what was

wrong with the execution, up to and including the points that may need

Trigger Warnings for sexual assault survivors in Incandescent: Losing

the Light

Next door, Valerie examines another single issue, one that involves an

actual sexual assault:

"Squadron Supreme" #4 is all about the rape that made Edith

(Inertia) a warrior. Because when yer dealin' with women there has

to be a reason, and more likely than not that reason is...you

guessed it, sexual assault.

I strongly advise everyone to continue reading the comments, at least

to this point.

Alau offers thoughts on discovering that she tests as a "Catwoman"

personality. (And this person better answers her question about Wonder

Woman)

Collie covers a lot of ground in this post on objectification, body

image, clothing, inequality, gaming, comics, sports, and more:

If we had to pick one word to describe superhero men, it'd probably

be "strength." Male supers are taller, stronger, shown with wider

shoulders and narrower waists than normal men. Their abs are

ripplingly developed, their jaws are square, their upper arms and

thighs are well muscled. Those things may make them seem sexier,

but it doesn't reduce them to sexual icons -- they are active, and

their muscles underline their power within the world. In effect,

they are presented as exciting ideals to identify with, rather than

as sexual toys.

If we had to pick one word for superhero women, though, it would

not be strength -- it would be "sex." Women have impossibly huge

breasts (sometimes larger than their heads), strangely long and

usually bare legs which are lengthened with high heels and slender

or bare hips, large full lips, and imposing masses of unruly long

hair. This might be fun in the bedroom, but it's likely to get them

killed in a fistfight. Heck, were I a super-villain in such a

world, I'd keep a minion working in the emergency rooms of all the

local hospitals. Their sole job would be to record all the athletic

women coming in with broken ankles -- as possible super-heroines

who'd fallen off their heels in a fight!

In addition to a mind that puts Paula Von Gunther to shame, she has

pictures to go along with her many other points!

Though not directly in response to Collie's minor mention of hosiary,

but still close enough that I can't resist giving them neighboring

stages, Stephanie Chan stands up for fishnet stockings:

I wanted to wear all black! I wanted a black swimsuit, a black

jacket, black buccaneer boots, and fishnet stockings. I don't know

why, but Alex Toth's Black Canary absolutely captured me.

I must admit Black Canary captured me too, particularly what she stood

for in her unusual outfit. So much so that I dedicated my first weekly

feature when I joined Stephanie at Blog@Newsarama to explaining the

feminist significance of this panel:

Next up, you see Liz's mixed reaction to the third X-Men movie:

First Mystique, then Rogue, then Jean, it's like the raging anxiety

about women being in touch with power had to hammer itself right

off the movie screen. I enjoyed X3, but it pissed me off,

especially the end!

Just across the fairway, Mickle lets you know what Eva Peron has in

common with Jean Grey:

However, ALW didn't think that a musical with a woman as the lead,

rather than just a lead would work (for whatever reason). He didn't

think her husband's character was really the right one to pull it

off either, so he created Che, Antonio Banderas's character.

She finished just in time for another act at the same booth as the

first X3 review: LeGuin, Boys' Own Adventure, and the Fine Art of

Genderfucking

This book was written in 1968.

And nothing else written since has carved such a significant place

for itself in both popularity and sheer genderfucking.

I repeat: this book was written in 1968

Elizabeth answers the above:

Lemme see. Okay, very few modern books period (nevermind SF novels,

nevermind feminist SF novels) have entered the canon to the extent

that The Left Hand of Darkness has, so frankly I think that's a

straw man. If you set up a definition of success that more or less

only includes TLHoD, it seems to me a little disingenuous to then

disallow Joanna Russ for being less accessible than Le Guin. I

think there's an unexamined catch-22 in that argument: Russ doesn't

count because she's not popular; she's not popular because she's

offputting; she's offputting because she's radical.

The normally political Maia geeks out for us:

So in honour of the greatness of Joss I've made a list of the top 5

most feminist episodes of Buffy, and just to show I've realised it

wasn't all destroying phalluses and overturning stereotypes I've

also listed the top 5 least feminist episodes of Buffy.

The author of this Chris Lightfellow story describes it best in her

submission email

I wrote this 'fic to get a better grasp on the character Chris

Lightfellow, from the video game Suikoden III, and to play around

with ideas of how she (one of the few female knights in her

country) might feel about gender roles in her society. Please do

_not_ confuse the game character with her manga incarnation, as for

the manga her spine was removed to make room for heaps of

insecurity, daddy issues, and enlarged tear ducts.

Constance Ash of Deep Genre relates a ballet to Buffy the Vampire

Slayer in a multi-part series that forces me to fudge the nomination

cut-off, from Part IV:

In a sense, Mina is a foremother of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. In

Buffy it is the male characters who are changed into monsters by

sex. In the place of the Brotherhood of True Men who destroy Lucy

in an ecstasy of voluptuous force, Buffy slays these monster males

- or, on occasion, transforms them.

The whole series is brilliant.

Ariel shares some thoughts stemming from a presentation she made on

Racialized Trafficking of Bodies in World of Warcraft:

I'm happy my first presentation to a big group (outside of the

classroom) went so well. I closed by saying although I believe

video games in many ways are sexist, racist, and classist, it's

okay to both critique and enjoy them, and that I'm optimistic

people like us can demand games become more progressive.

With all of these lovely submissions and nominations, I wasn't sure

whether to include something from this very blog, or if the analysis

of the panel earlier was sufficient. It felt unfair to hog two posts

on the Carnival even rationalizing it as "two different blogs". I

broke other rules such as the date restrictions with stretchier

rationalization ("It's the first one," I told myself, "Technically

everything ever written falls under your submission period). I

agonized over it, and as I am a shameless attention seeker who loves

to see her own writing -- and I do write at more than one blog -- I

chose to do the unforgivable and offer a second sample of my humble

efforts, a stream of conciousness scribbling that touches on why I

personally felt an event like this was needed. My sincerest apologies

to those of you who submitted more than one nomination and saw it cut

out. Takes off top-hat and bows her head apologetically

And with that, (Replaces Tophat) our unfortunately short show draws to

a close. I'm more than pleased with the turn-out, especially as this

was the first-ever carnival. My When Fangirls Attack partner Kalinara

has graciously decided to host the Second Carnival of Feminist Science

Fiction and Fantasy Fans at Pretty, Fizzy Paradise on July 18th,

details here.

If your craving for thought-provoking reading is still unsatisfied,

there are other venues of feminist reading out right now. The Second

Erase Racism Carnival has been up for over a week now. And the Second

Carnival to End Sexual Violence is up at Abyss2Hope. And the big one,

the The Mainstream Carnival of Feminists is expected on the Fifth of

July. Bitch|Lab hosted the previous edition and if you haven't seen it

I urge you to drop by.

Hat comes off again, takes a bow.

I'd like to thank everyone who submitted, nominated, and spread the

word about this Carnival. And I'd like to thank you for reading.

Please come by again, and please, feel free to link this and the

future editions whereever applicable.

After another slight bow, the monstrosity replaces her hat and hops

down from the stage.

((EDIT: In my sleep deprived state this morning, I left out 4

wonderful posts that had been on my list -- My apologies for that.

Merc Wanderer's Chris Lightfellow fanfiction, Valerie's review of

Squadron Supreme #4, Constance Ash's piece on vampire ballet, and

Shannon's article on Allies are edited in as of Sunday afternoon.

Sorry!))

((And, for those of you wondering, this is why I skipped my regular

Saturday feature on this blog. Figured it more than made up for it.))


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