Virgin Birth – Not So Miraculous

Parthenogenisis as a means of creating a female-only culture has been mooted in a number of feminist SF books, including Ammonite by Nicola Griffith and the Holdfast Chronicles by Suzy McKee Charnas. But could it work?

Well there’s one reptile species, the New Mexico whiptail lizard, that is entirely female. Also, biologists working in zoos have known for some time that various species of sharks, reptiles and birds can get pregnant without male intervention. That includes animals as large as a Komodo Dragon. However, it was uncertain whether this was natural behavior or a stress reaction brought on by living in zoo conditions. Now Nature reports that two species of viper have been proven to exhibit parthenogenesis in the wild. Unlike the whiptail lizard, these are species that normally reproduce sexually, but are now known to use parthenogenesis as well. Those serpents, eh? Always causing mischief for the Patriarchy.

As far as I know, no mammal has ever been seen to exhibit parthenogenesis. Also, given the mammalian chromosome structure, any child of a virgin birth would be female.

Trowbridge Arts Festival

This weekend my home town of Trowbridge is launching its very own arts festival. As you might expect from an English country town, it has a somewhat eccentric list of events: everything from a knitting contest to “have a go bell ringing” to Burlesque, Morris Men and Islamic Calligraphy. It also has book events, featuring popular writers such as Val McDermid and Ben Kane. It is a measure of how conclusively we are winning the culture war that the centerpiece literary event is a day of science fiction and fantasy sponsored by our local Waterstones. It will feature local(-ish) writers such as Joe Abercrombie, Moira Young, Juliet McKenna, Guy Haley and Jonathan Howard. I’m not involved in organizing this, though I might have played a small part in introducing the organizers to some fine writers. I will, however, be there on Saturday to see it all happen. I will be very interested to see how it goes.

Shout Out Podcasts Live

Mary the Producer must have been working very hard yesterday, because all of the podcasts from Saturday’s marathon at the Shout Out Bristol radio show are now live. I am in both hours of the “Out and About” show. I’m about 40 minutes into the first hour, and 25 minutes into the second. I’ve just listened to the first one and it sounded OK (much relief). It has plugs for Patrick Ness, Melissa Scott, Lethe Press, Aqueduct Press and BristolCon. And you get to find out which song I chose.

There’s also a lot of other good material. I want to listen to the “God Loves Gays” show. Also my friend Dru Marland was on earlier in the day, though I’m not sure when. And of course I want to listen to Natalie’s show which is all about getting dolled up for a party. The poor girl had to spend hours in a beauty salon “for research”.

A Grand Day Out

I spent most of the day in Bristol. After a little book shopping (so, Tad, you have a new novel…) I turned up for the first half of the BristolCon meeting where much good stuff was plotted. Then I headed out for the Bristol Community Radio studios for my appearance on Shout Out.

I had two slots on The 16:00-18:00 show. During the first I got to talk about SF, including plugs for Wizard’s Tower, Lethe Press and BristolCon. In the second I teamed up with Jess from Bi Visible Bristol and Peter from Off the Record (a support service for LGBT youth) to talk about how different parts of the community experience being out.

The show should be available as a podcast in a few days time via this page.

Happy Birthday Andromeda

What’s the most long-running English language SF fiction magazine that you have never heard of? I’m guessing that it will be the Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine, and I’m guessing that because it is published in Australia which makes distribution challenging. However, they have been publishing for 10 years, and to celebrate their anniversary issue is available in epub. And that means it is available in the bookstore.

You can learn more about the magazine and the people behind it at their website.

Hopefully we’ll have more issues available soon.

The Original Time Machine

Those of you who remember my posts about the science fiction exhibition at the British Museum might recall my mention of a novel about a time machine that preceded the one by H.G. Wells. Why do so few people seem to know about this? Because it is in Spanish, of course, and we English speakers are very bad about noticing things in other languages.

But no longer. The fine folks at Wesleyan University Press have produced an English language edition of The Time Ship, by Enrique Gaspar, translated by Yolanda Molina-Gavilán & Andrea Bell. The book contains illustrations by Francesc Soler from the original 1887 edition. I quote briefly from the blurb:

Dr. Sindulfo is joined by a motley crew of French prostitutes and Spanish soldiers, traveling to exotic locales like Paris, Morocco, China, Pompeii and even the beginnings of the universe.

I’m delighted to see that the good Doctor thought to equip his craft with a washing machine and various automatic cooking devices, though possibly this is because he felt that his female passengers had more important things to do than housework.

The book is available from the usual outlets, including ebook editions. It is a bit expensive as it is from an academic press, but I guess the market for this sort of thing is quite small.

Of course it goes straight onto the jury’s reading list for next year’s Translation Awards.

Also in the package from Wesleyan that arrived this morning was a copy of Starboard Wine by Samuel R. Delany, which Matt Cheney describes much better than I could (given that Wesleyan had him write the introduction).

Still Busy

I’m still doing crazy hours on the day job, which is good financially but frustrating with regard to everything else.

Of course this means that I’m missing out on all of the various online dramas that have been happening. That’s probably just as well, but I did want to pop my head above the parapet and say that I am desperately sorry for Ann VanderMeer, Stephen Segal and all of the other people who did a great job on Weird Tales, only to be kicked off the magazine and then see its reputation destroyed by the new editor. Thankfully good people can always find good things to do. Which reminds me that I saw an actual copy of The Weird in a bookstore yesterday. Goddess, it is a beautiful thing.

Remembering Harry

While I did get to meet Harry Harrison a couple of times, we never talked much. I was happy to leave him to the very many people who were huge fans of his books (as opposed to just ordinary admirers like me). I can’t, therefore, leave much in the way of memories. However, given the way he has been spoken about today by Neil Gaiman and John Scalzi, it is pretty clear that he was a very wonderful person. I know that this is the way the SF community often works, but it is always good to see it confirmed elsewhere.

Fantasy Mistressworks

Over at the Fantasy Mistressworks blog Amanda Rutter has posted a list of 50 top fantasy books by women. As with most such things, it is a bit of a mystery to me. I don’t understand how one can have a list of top fantasy by women and not include Ellen Kushner, Liz Hand, or Caitlin Kiernan, for example. But these things are all subjective. I’m not blogging to complain. I’m blogging to celebrate the fact that the list includes The Thief’s Gamble by Juliet E. McKenna, which I will be publishing soon (hopefully next month, but quality before speed). Golly gosh, what with this and Lyda’s award-studded series, I’m starting to feel like a real publisher.

Melded Again

I have a contribution to the latest SF Signal Mind Meld: Non-Fiction Books About Science Fiction That Should Be In Every Fan’s Library. I see that I am in excellent company, including Gary and Jonathan. I thought when I wrote my piece that I had probably listed too many books, as few works are truly essential, but I see that many of my colleagues have suggested even more. There are a few books there I really should have mentioned, and many more than I’d like to read myself. You can find the whole thing here.

Africa: an End and a Beginning

This weekend sees the final days of the Science Fiction in Africa exhibition at The Arnolfini in Bristol. To mark this there have been more events, and this afternoon I attended a talk by two of the founders of the AlterFutures speculative design group. Cher Potter and Daisy Ginsberg are both of South Africa descent, though they currently live in London. Why design, you might ask? Isn’t that what slackers study in art school, like the character in Donald Fagan’s song, “The New Frontier”? Well perhaps, but design is also about making things for people to use, and it is about art, which can be inspirational. Speculative design, therefore, is not just about how we might live in the future, but can also be about creating ideas of futures to which people might aspire.

These days, of course, it is popular to pour scorn on the idea of countries being aspirational, but when the American Dream was first invented it wasn’t about waiting tables in LA until someone notices your face, it was about packing up everything you owned and heading out to start a new life in the new world. Besides, Southern Hemisphere countries have a pretty stark choice: if they don’t aspire to a high tech future of their own, they will surely be part of someone else’s high tech future, and not in a good way. Either that or they will go “back to nature” and become a theme park for Westerners to coo over. Cher and Daisy, therefore, are interested in what sort of future South Africans might aspire to, and what sort of technology they will need to get there.

There are, of course, many professional futurists making plans for Africa (cue XTC). Most of them, however, are either government bureaucrats or employees of multinational corporations. They are the sort of people who want to convince Africans to be less nervous of things like GM food than people in Europe; not because they want to feed the poor, but because they want to recoup the millions they have spent developing these products. When such people envisage a high tech future for Africa it tends to involve vast factory farms growing a single crop and operated by a small number of highly skilled technicians. It doesn’t involve ordinary Africans in rural villages having more prosperous smallholdings and a higher standard of living.

Being old and cynical, I tend to take a fairly dim view of people with plans to save the world. However, from talking to Cher and Daisy afterwards it was clear they they have a very good grasp of the difficulties. High tech solutions can’t just be invented in isolation, they have to be implemented, and have to be capable of working in the culture and conditions where they are to be used. This stuff isn’t easy. But there is a target in sight. In 2014 Cape Town will be the World Design Capital. Cher and Daisy have a dream of presenting something there that will inspire South Africans to dream of a future that is not only better, but is achievable and doesn’t involve selling themselves to multi-national corporations. I wish them the best of luck. And I’ll be emailing Lauren Beukes very shortly.

The event should also have featured Cristina de Middel whose Afronauts series of photographs would have been a wonderful addition to the exhibition. Sadly her flight from Zambia was so badly delayed that she had to cancel. I was really looking forward to hearing more about the Zambian space program (yes, really) on which her project is based.

We made up for that slightly with the presence of a couple a French designers, and a Senegalese friend of theirs, who joined us for a drink afterwards. The main thing I learned from this is that wrestling has become a huge cultural phenomenon in Senegal. Here’s a BBC article about the phenomenon from a couple of years ago.

There are a couple of actual African science fiction films being shown this evening: Africa Paradis (Senegal) and Les Saignantes (Cameroon). Unfortunately the showings didn’t start until 8:00pm and I’d have trouble getting home afterwards, so I have bailed on that. My apologies to Mark Bould.

Africa Revisited

Here are a few follow-ups on the subject of African science fiction.

First up, with thanks to DaveH for the heads-up, the BBC World Service has a programme narrated by Lauren Beukes which includes interviews with Neill Blomkamp (District 9), Wanuri Kahiu (Pumzi), Jonathan Dotse, and Nnedi Okorafor. It is well worth a listen (and includes Lauren pronouncing her last name). You can find it on the iPlayer.

In addition I attended an event in Bristol at the weekend at which Mark Bould and Roger Luckhurst presented a couple of French films on colonialism as works that could be interpreted as science fiction. This was, if you’ll pardon the phrase, a bit of an academic exercise, but it was interesting all the same.

Les Statues Meurent Aussi (literally Statues Also Die, but I’d translate it as Even Statues Can Die) is a 1953 film by Chris Marker and Alain Resnais about the effect of colonialism on African culture. The central argument of the film is that by removing African cultural artifacts from their cultural context and placing them in museums we are not preserving culture, we are killing it. That’s an important message, and one I need to take to heart as I’ll be helping stage a museum exhibition (albeit nothing to do with Africa) in the next few months. However, it isn’t in itself science-fictional.

What got the film into the event is the fact that at one point the narrator says, “We are the Martians of Africa”. He then goes on to talk about diseases, which makes it fairly clear that Marker and Resnais had Wells in mind when making the film. Wells, of course, wrote The War of the Worlds in part in reaction to the genocide of the native Tasmanian people by European (mostly British) settlers.

Given when it was made, it is unsurprising that, despite their good intentions, Marker and Resnais come over incredibly patronizing at times, but the film is visually stunning. You can see the whole thing on Vimeo, though sadly only in French. There’s a subtitled version on YouTube, but because of length restrictions it is split into three parts.

The other film was La Noire de… by Ousmane Sembène, a Senegalese filmmaker who lived part of his life in France. The SFnal connection here is even less obvious, though the extreme lack of communication between the heroine and her employers has a lot to tell us about alienation. Diouana, a young woman from Senegal, takes a job as a maid with a French couple living in Dakar. When her employers return to France they invite her to come with them, with disastrous consequences.

I’m going to display my prejudices here. There are good reasons for studying films. There’s much more room to read meanings into images than with text. Also you get far more respect in the UK if your study of science fiction is confined to film. But equally it can be hard to get over a subtle argument in a film and this one left me largely with questions that got in the way of whatever story it was trying to tell.

Of course it doesn’t help that we are also working with a translation. Even the title is difficult. The subtitled version is called Black Girl, but that’s not what the French title means. Wikipedia translates the French title as “The black girl belonging to…” but (and hopefully Kari will correct me if I am wrong) I much prefer “The black girl from…”. That’s a much more accurate summation of how Diouana falls between two cultures.

Further events related to the African Science Fiction exhibition are happening this week. On Thursday evening there’s a talk about the relationship between the music of the Mbenga-Mbuti people (commonly known as “pygmies”) and the soundtrack of 2001: A Space Odyssey. Entrance is free, but you do need to book a place so see here for details. And on Saturday there are some free talks examining possible African futures: details here.

More On Africa

There’s another SF in Africa event in Bristol on Saturday. This one is a fairly serious academic discussion all about treating stories of colonization as if they were science fiction. My friends Mark Bould and Roger Luckhurst will be involved. There are more details over at the BristolCon website.

I won’t be there for the entire event as I have duties elsewhere as part of my involvement with the local LGBT History group, but I should be there at some point.

Coode Street Follow-Up

I have managed to listen to the latest Coode Street, in which Gary & Jonathan return to the question of gender balance in SF. A few quick points are in order.

Firstly, I was very happy with the way Jonathan & Gary pulled themselves back from saying something silly the previous week. Podcasts are hard, because you can’t edit what you say, or clarify if a listener doesn’t understand, but they do a good job of watching each other.

I suspect that Gary is right in saying that women do not write the sort of emotionless SF that was popular decades ago. Male writers don’t write it much these days either. That wasn’t my point.

Also I spotted N.K. Jemisin on Twitter complaining that you shouldn’t say a work is “not fantasy” just because it has consistent world-building. That’s quite right, but also isn’t addressing my point. I’m not interested in fan debates over whether SF or fantasy is “better” or “more intellectual” or whatever. All I’m interested in is whether the gender of the author influences whether a work is regarded as science fiction or fantasy, because if it does that has implications for the whole “women don’t write SF” discussion.

And finally, you can’t disprove a point like that by pointing to examples of women who are accepted as SF writers. Of course there are many of them. Some of them write very hard SF. But I’m interested in the ones in the middle, the ones where there is some doubt as to how their work should be classified.

New Magazines

We have two new PDF magazines available in the bookstore.

Bull Spec #7 includes fiction, poetry, interviews, essays and reviews.

Icarus #12 has a similar mix of content, but with particular emphasis on gay characters.

And I think I am now up to date with the shop, at least in terms of what I have. Now to chase things I would like to have.

Africa in Science Fiction – The Exhibition

Last week I discovered, much to my surprise and delight, that the Arnolfini in Bristol was staging an exhibition titled Superpower: Africa in Science Fiction. The Arnolfini is an arts centre in the Bristol docklands, situated opposite the Watershed which I’ve mentioned many times before. It is one of those “white room” exhibition spaces, but it also contains lecture rooms and I attended a talk by Tom Abba there earlier this year. The Africa exhibition opened on the Saturday, and there was a discussion panel involving the curators, Nav Haq and Al Cameron, and one of the exhibitors. I was there, as were Mark Bould, Tim Maughan and David Roden. You may have seen my tweets.

The exhibition is a mixture of work by Western artists who have visited Africa to make their work, and work by African artists. Personally I’d prefer to see the latter, but if you have an exhibition you need to fill then you take what you can get. I appreciate that the modern fashion is for very sparse exhibitions, but it did seem like there was room for more, so either the budget or the available material may have run out.

The importance of events such as this became very obvious during the panel discussion when we got on to talking about the idea of presenting positive futures for Africa, as compared to how African artists can make money. Suppose you are an African photographer. It would be nice to be able to sell your work to the Western media. To do that, you have to know what they want, and what they want is very simple: pictures of suffering. There’s no money to be made in Africa, we were told, by showing Africans as happy, healthy, self-reliant and successful people. What the Western media wants is pictures of Africa that play to the prevailing image of it as a failed continent: a place full over poverty, war, starvation.

Science fiction, then, gives us an opportunity to present a different Africa. Not Africa as it is defined to be by our media, but one which we claim to have made up, and can therefore be more real. Or not, depending on how much invention happens to take place. At any rate, there can be confidence, and hope.

The majority of the exhibits are short films. I want to return to this in a little while, but first I want to highlight some of the exhibits, and that fact that many of them are on film means that I haven’t had a chance to see the whole thing. I’ll be partly going from descriptions in the exhibition brochure, and partly from what I know of the material in question from other sources. First, however, a few things I can talk more authoritatively about.

The one item that is entirely text is a transcript of a round table discussion that took place on ARPANET in 1976. That’s remarkable enough, but the participants include American political economist, Francis Fukayama, and the South African activist, Steven Biko. That’s a conversation that it is fascinating to be able to step through time and listen in on.

Another exhibit that is easily and quickly viewed is Icarus 13, a series of photographs accompanied by a model and some text. The installation was created by Angolan artist, Kiluanji Kia Henda. He was supposed to be present at the panel discussion, but was unable to leave Angola. There was no explanation as to why, but I fear he may have been denied entry to the UK.

Icarus 13 is based on an Africa joke about a past President of Mozambique with big ideas. He is supposed to have decided that his country would launch a manned mission to the sun. On being told that the rocket would burn up in the sun’s heat he declared, “we will go at night!” So the joke is that the presidents of newly independent African countries have ideas way beyond their ability to deliver. Yet Henda had created a exhibit which shows photographs of the supposed sunship being built, and even the astronauts returning home. There’s a picture of the ship below, taken from the website of the research organization, Former West, and you can read the amusing description of the mission that Henda provided at this Spanish arts site. The “ship” is actually a real building in Luanda, the capital of Angola. It is the Agostinho Neto Mausoleum, a memorial to the country’s first president.

Icarus 13

A second photographic exhibit is Common Task: Mali, by Paweł Althamer from Warsaw. He and his crew traveled to the lands of the Dogon and dressed in gold suits so that they could get pictures of “aliens” visiting Mali. The Dogon, of course, are one of the peoples whom Erich von Daniken claimed had been visited by extraterrestrials (The Sirius Mystery, debunk here). I can see what Althamer was trying to do, but without context the pictures just looked like a bunch of rich Westerners peering at the unfortunate savages, which I’m sure wasn’t the message I was supposed to take away.

On then, to the films. The first one I’d like to note is Neill Blomkamp’s Alive in Joburg. This is something he shot as a trailer for District 9. It features a number of real Johannesburg citizens complaining about the influx of immigrants to the city. In District 9 these immigrants are aliens, but Blomkamp got the footage by asking his subjects to talk about human immigrants from Zimbabwe.

Superpower – Dakar Chapter is a film by British artist, Mark Aerial Waller. He was present at the panel, and clearly knew a bit about science fiction — he kept citing Phil Dick. In the film, a group of Senagalese astronomers discover a gas cloud that acts as a mirror, reflecting light from Earth back home. In this way we are able to watch images from our own past. I’m not sure about the physics of this, but it reminded me of Robert Charles Wilson’s Blind Lake. It was a nice SFnal idea. Mark tells me that much of his work has SF themes. You can see more of what he does at his website.

Finally we have Pumzi, a film by Kenya’s Wanuri Kahiu. Nnedi Okorafor has been enthusing about this for time, and Gary Wolfe added his voice after she got him to see it. Peggy Kolm mentioned it too, and I blogged about it early in 2010. At last I am going to be able to see the whole thing myself. This is classic science fiction. (Tim, who has seen it, says it reminds him of films like Logan’s Run and THX-1138).

Overall I am very pleased that this exhibition exists. However, I do have some reservations about the nature of the content. Firstly, of course, films do not make good art gallery exhibits. How many visitors are going to wait for the next showing of Pumzi to start, and then sit through all 21 minutes of it? Not many, I suspect, so the material won’t be shown to best effect.

Of course I’m concerned about the lack of any literary material in the exhibit. I am, after all, a literary critic. And as I showed in my earlier post, there’s a lot of science fiction being written about Africa, and by Africans. Sadly it is difficult to get the British arts establishment to take literary SF seriously. Tell them you are doing work on science fiction films and they’ll be happy to support you. Tell them you are working on science fiction books and they’ll turn their noses up.

The problem with this, however, is that the emphasis on film immediately puts the Africans in a position of inferiority. Making a film is an expensive business requiring many people and complicated equipment. Science fiction films, in particular, are expected to include impressive special effects. Any film produced by Africans will inevitably be compared with the output of Hollywood and found wanting. Books, on the other hand, are comparatively easy to produce. All they require is a talented author with a computer and lots of time. Some African writers are already producing SF&F literature as good as, or better than, most Western writers can manage (for example NgÅ©gÄ© wa Thiong’o). By taking away the need for sophisticated technology, and the expectation of high production values, you level the playing field and allow artists from anywhere in the world to compete. It seems to me that for now we should be giving Africans that opportunity, not judging them solely on their ability to make movies.

Is Australian Fantasy Dominated By Women?

In all of the discussions about gender balance in SF&F, Australia has seemed to stick out as a counter example. Is that really the case? I asked Tansy Rayner Roberts to take a closer look at the issues. Take it away, Tansy…


Our industry runs on perceptions and, let’s face it, superstition. All manner of beliefs still do the rounds like gossip that never dies: from green books don’t sell and you must have a name on the A-F shelf to Boys Don’t Read Girl Books, SF is For Menfolk, No One Hires Proofreaders Any More and, oh how about:

Australian Fantasy Fiction Is Dominated By Female Authors.

Cheryl asked me to peck away at this particular perception, because it’s been raised several times in the Writer and the Critic podcast, usually as a throwaway, teasing comment from Mondy, followed up by a necessary jab of the Pointy Stick by Kirstyn.

Yes, it is a common perception in the Australian spec fic community, that our fantasy (itself the most healthy and flourishing of the spec fic genres) has more female authors than male, and certainly more women who have a substantial professional profile. But is it true?

Certainly we can see impressive representation by female authors across awards lists in Australia over the last few years. I was startled after winning last year’s Ditmar Best Novel (a community award voted upon by members of the National Science Fiction Convention each year) to realise I was only the sixth woman to have won it in the 40+ years of the award’s history. (Cherry Wilder, Lucy Sussex, K.J. Bishop, Margo Lanagan, Kaaron Warren and me, in case you were wondering) Those wins occurred in 1977, 1997, 2004, 2009, 2010 and 2011.

What a development! Four of those wins are from the last seven years, and the last three consecutive Ditmar awards have been won by women. Which suggests something big has changed, right?

The indomitable Mondy wrote his own post recently, looking at the pattern of Ditmars given to Australian spec fic writers over the last decade which includes not only the Best Novel category but the two short fiction categories too, and notes a definite shift in the pattern overall, from being an award that mostly honoured male writers to being one that mostly honours women.

But that’s just one award. Luckily, we have another! If you look at the Aurealis Awards, a jury-based award of Australian speculative fiction excellence which has been running since 1995, awarding a Best Novel prize annually across several categories including science fiction, fantasy and horror (as well as categories for children & young adult which I won’t look at for the purposes of this article), we have the following breakdown:

Best Fantasy Novel
Male authors – 6
Female authors – 13

Best Science Fiction Novel
Male authors – 15 (including 3 co-authors)
Female authors – 3 (including 1 co-author)

Best Horror Novel
Male authors – 6
Female authors – 8

In the last three years, when the Ditmar has been won by exclusively female authors, the Aurealis has also awarded Best Fantasy Novel to three women, while awarding Best Science Fiction Novel to two men and one woman, and Best Horror novel to two women and one man.

On the face of it, then, when it comes to local awards, we see that female authors are doing better than male authors in Australian fantasy fiction, but also that they are doing better in fantasy than in the other two speculative fiction genres.

Ah, but I hear you say, never mind awards! Answer the question! Is Australian fantasy dominated by women?

The trouble with the word ‘dominated,’ and the reason so many of us roll our eyes when it is trotted out, is that it has connotations of unfairness. If there is a dominator, then doesn’t that also mean someone is being oppressed? And indeed, that’s the reason I was hesitant to tackle this topic. The last thing I wanted was to give ammunition to anyone who wanted to throw stones at the women of the Australian spec fic community on behalf of its poor, oppressed male authors (most of whom, I should note, are not publicly complaining, at least where I can hear them).

The truth is that as long as Australia has had an active professional science fiction and fantasy publishing industry, female authors and readers have been a massive part of its success. While Australia has also had successful male authors in science fiction and in fantasy, we have never lacked for female role models; living proof that a) fantasy by women can sell in high numbers and b) fantasy doesn’t necessarily become less epic because of a female byline.

What’s really surprising is that it has taken this long for that success to be mirrored in the Ditmars (whereas you can see it reflected in the Aurealis results of the last 15+ years). The change, if this is a change and not an anomaly, may be found by looking at who are nominating and voting in the Ditmars, whether this demographic has changed or merely changed their reading habits. As I commented at Mondy’s blog: either Ditmar voters have begun to respect females, or readers who respect female authors have begun to vote in the Ditmars.

Rowena Cory Daniells has been blogging a regular series of interviews with female fantasy writers (and occasional men) on her blog, and one question she consistently asks is about their experiences with gender issues and fantasy — have they found fantasy & SF to be a boys club in countries other than Australia, and whether they think women and men write differently. It’s worth looking across the interviews because of the variety of responses!

Still, that’s still mostly talking about perception and anecdote, isn’t it? Let’s get back to some number crunching.

Tsana Dolichva was kind enough to compile some stats for me. Her data is based on the eligible works for the 2011 Ditmar ‘Best Novel’ which was an open wiki, and almost certainly has some texts missing, but should give us some good general information. Tsana looked at the gender breakdown across genres of all fantasy/SF/horror novels published by Australian authors, and then again with children and YA books filtered out to just look at the adult books. Her numbers include small press and self-published works, which combined provide a little over half the data. They also don’t distinguish between Australian and o/s publishers.

The results?

Tsana worked out that 55% of all published Aussie specfic books in 2011 were written by women, 44% by men, and 1% by other. When she looked just at the Aussie specfic written for adults in 2011, it shifted to 53% women and 47% men.

But we weren’t really talking about speculative fiction, we were talking about Australian fantasy. And what do the numbers (for adult novels) say about that?

62% female authors. A healthy majority, certainly, but I’m not sure it’s enough to justify the term ‘dominate’, and I certainly don’t think it’s a dramatic enough statistic to make people panic about the lack of menfolk, especially seeing it side by side with the gender statistics for science fiction and horror. Neither, of course, is it a dramatic enough statistic to explain the recent ‘DOMINATION’ of Australian spec fic awards.

What the numbers do tell us is that Australian Fantasy is NOT dominated by Male Authors, and that’s apparently something that makes us stand out from the international crowd. I’d love to see the gender number crunching pie charts for other countries to check against the perceptions we have about UK and US fantasy being dominated by men…


Many thanks, Tansy. For those of you not familiar with her work …

Tansy’s award-winning Creature Court trilogy: Power and Majesty, The Shattered City and Reign of Beasts, featuring flappers with swords, shape changers, half-naked men and bloodthirsty court politics, have been released worldwide on the Kindle, and should be available soon across other e-book platforms. If you prefer your books solid and papery, they can also be found in all good Australian and New Zealand bookshops.

You can also check out Tansy’s work through the Hugo-nominated crunchy feminist science fiction podcast Galactic Suburbia, Tansy’s short story collection Love and Romanpunk (Twelfth Planet Press). You can find her on the internet at her blog, or on Twitter as @tansyrr.