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Forty Whacks
Scots SF author Ken Macleod visits sunny Spain for the second installment
of 'Stitch and Split: Selves and Territories in Science Fiction',
in Seville, sponsored by the Universidad Internacional de Andalucia.
Take a walk with Ken down the Latin road to SFF.
Last
week I was at the second installment of Stitch and Split: Selves
and Territories in Science Fiction, in Seville, sponsored by the
Universidad Internacional de Andalucia.
On the plane over I had a window seat. Saw the
white cliffs of Dover, the Channel Islands, Britanny, the Bay of
Biscay and then a long stretch of Spain. You can tell a country's
system of inheritance from the air. Big fields = primogeniture.
A book idea: interesting stuff you can see and figure out from the
window seat of an airliner. I can imagine a children's book, but
also an adult one.

The University had a taxi waiting for me at the airport. The hotel
was in an area called Triana, across the river from the older city
and close to the Magic Island of buildings from Expo 92, and to
the enormous former monastery in which the university has some rooms,
and where the event was taking place.
I freshened up and got there in good time. The university's organizer
for the event, Isabel Ojeda Cruz, a very attractive and pleasant
young woman, took me through hundreds of metres of architectural
marvel to meet Stitch and Split event organisers, the two Belgians
I'd met at the earlier gig in Barcelona - Laurence Rassell and her
partner Nicolas - as well as other participants and the translator,
a bouncy muscular guy who has translated a lot of top-level meetings
and is fairly sceptical of the top level as a result.
A Spanish SF writer, Juan Miguel Aguilera was also on the first
evening, and he talked about space colonies. I missed some of his
talk through not having my translation headphones gadget on the
right channel, or something. My talk ('We are one people') was a
run-through of the Fall Revo future history and an explanation of
what political motives it had (basically a re-work of the Nova Express
article from way back) - against identity politics and balkanization.
A lot of lively discussion followed.
After that we had a break then watched Born in Flames (1983) a
film by Lizzie Borden. This film is a cult classic, and deservedly
so. Its innovative style and editing stand out and the passion of
its creators and actors is evident, and it's a film I intend to
see again. As a comment on the earlier discussion it was an inspired
piece of programming by Laurence.
The premise of this documentary-style film is that ten years after
America's peaceful, democratic socialist revolution, women are still
oppressed, and a new campaigning movement, the Women's Army, arises
to fight this oppression. This would have been a fascinating film
if that is what it had been about, but it isn't. It's still fascinating,
but in a train-wreck kind of way.
First, we soon find that there has been no socialist revolution.
The economy is obviously still capitalist, and not even what a hard-liner
might call state capitalist. The new order is called 'social democracy'
but it is not even that. Sweden could knock spots off the place.
Absolutely no social gains are shown or implied. Not only has nothing
changed for women, nothing has changed for anybody, apart from the
rhetoric of the rulers. However, this is not a point made strongly
in the film. Its whole thrust makes no sense unless it is saying
that socialism makes no difference for women, but does for men.
The oppression of women in the future socialist America is in no
way subtle. They are forced out of industrial jobs in favour of
'male heads of families'. They are raped in broad daylight in the
street. Rape rehabilitation centres are set up to reintegrate rapists
into society.
Rape victims get nothing. Leave revolutionary or democratic socialism
out of it - there is not a Stalinist or Social Democratic bureaucrat
in the world who wouldn't jump at the chance to fix women's oppression
at that level by pulling women into factories and pushing rapists
into labour camps, as formerly existing socialism did. The actual
forms of women's oppression in actually or formerly existing socialism
didn't get a look-in.
The very best feature of the film was some rap-style singing by
a young woman in one of the radical feminist radio stations.
The women's army has a charismatic lesbian black construction-worker
leader, who has a charismatic black older feminist mentor behind
the scenes. Their first actions are defending women raped in broad
daylight in the streets, or hassled by boors on the Metro. Then
they escalate to a big demo in New York. This is shown by clips
of women's liberation demos of the 1970s, in which unfortunately
for the film's thesis the banners and placards of revolutionary
socialists are prominent.
The heroine is sacked from her construction job. Women demonstrate
in hard hats for union jobs. Nothing happens. The young female editors
of Socialist Youth Review, journal of the youth wing of the ruling
party, denounce them on television. They, unlike the radical women,
wear bouncy styled hair, blouses, and skirts. They mouth absurd
lines without conviction. Young white men riot for jobs. Young black
men riot for jobs. Secretaries strike for job advancement prospects.
After more of this sort of thing, the women's army gets serious,
as only macho New Left Americans can get serious: they pick up the
gun.
The heroine is arrested on return from the Saharan republic, where
she has been getting military training from disaffected/betrayed
Polisario women. She dies in prison in an apparent suicide, but
actually a murder. The Socialist Youth Review women see the light,
denounce this in their journal, and lose their positions on the
editorial board.
Women's Army cadres seize television studios at gunpoint and forcibly
broadcast their version of events. Repression hammers down. The
radical feminist radio station is blown up. The Women's Army then
plants a bomb in the transmission mast at the top of ... the World
Trade Center. The last frame is of a big explosion at the top of
the Twin Towers. Fade to black. Credits roll.
Scattered applause from the audience.
I asked feminist SF critic Catherine Ramirez what she thought of
it. She said she found it painful to watch.
The next day I wandered around the centre of Seville, taking in
the Cathedral and the Alcazar. For sheer aesthetic overload I've
seen nothing like either of them since I stood in front of the wall
of the Library of Celsus at Ephesus. I also happened upon the Seville
Book Fair, at which I was startled to find a stand of literature
from the Fundacion Frederico Engels, associated with the website
In Defence of Marxism. I had a brief and friendly conversation with
them, mainly about recent events in Spain.
That evening the British academic and political theorist Salman
Sayyid gave a carefully reasoned discourse on how SF was an intrinsically
anti-political genre, of which more later, and Catherine Ramirez
gave a lecture on slavery and freedom in the SF of Octavia Butler.
I have to say that though I disagreed with it Salman's talk was
the high point of the two days I was there, and the discussion that
followed was intense. The film that evening was Tribulation 99:
Alien Anomalies Under America (Craig Baldwin, 1991), a hilarious
send-up of the maddest UFO conspiracy theories combined with an
account of US interventions in Latin America (explained as its struggle
against the aliens).
After each evening we all went out and had dinner around midnight,
for 10 Euros and 13 euros per head respectively, of some of the
best food I've tasted anywhere.
Ken MacLeod
(c) Ken Macleod 2004
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OTHER CONTENT - June 2004
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Neal
Asher Interview
Psychologically disturbed android killing machines. A Beast that harvests people
to research its genetic dabbling across time by sending them back to the primordial
ages. A mysterious Japanese man still living millennia after Hiroshima. A physicist
that uses nanotechnology to merge with a spacecraft. Welcome to the weird and
wonderful world of Neal Asher.
(INTERVIEWS)
Big
Ben
Ben Jeapes interviewed. The author speaks about penning cracking reads like
'His Majesty's Starship' , the differences between writing SF for the young
adult market and the 'grown-up' sector, and the sadness of shutting the doors
at his own publishing house, Big Engine.
(INTERVIEWS)
Just
a Tad More
If Tad Williams' Memory, Sorrow & Thorn series is "the fantasy equivalent of
War and Peace" (Locus magazine), then Tad must be Fantasy's Leo Tolstoy. The
prolific Mr Williams is cornered for some vodka and a chat.
(INTERVIEWS)
Bruce
on Bruce
The father of cyberpunk - or at the very least the Uncle - Bruce Sterling, chats
about his new technothriller, The Zenith Angle, with real-life security expert
Bruce Schneier.
(INTERVIEWS)
Forty
Whacks
Scots SF author Ken Macleod visits sunny Spain for the second installment of
'Stitch and Split: Selves and Territories in Science Fiction', in Seville, sponsored
by the Universidad Internacional de Andalucia. Take a walk with Ken down the
Latin road to SFF.
(COMMENT)
Eight
Days in Zagreb
Our jetsetting Scots SF author Ken Macleod flies out to Croatia as a guest at
the Sferakon convention. He finds the old world of Yugoslav science fiction
intriguing, from the pulp cover translations of Western SF novels to state-sponsored
SFF societies.
(COMMENT)
The
Weird Tale of 'Pulgasari'
Mark takes a look at the fantasy film Pulgasari; featuring a beast which was
a North Korean giant monster who ate iron and grew to hundreds of feet high.
It's director was kidnapped from South Korea, taken to North Korea, imprisoned
for four years with no explanation, and then forced to make the only Marxist
monster movie.
(ARTICLES)
Godsend
In Godsend, Frank finds a run-of-the-mill child-cloning thriller turned into
a flaccid frightfest that is all clumsy thumbs, and no controllable finger to
decisively point this devilish dud of a movie in the right creative direction.
(FILM REVIEWS)
Shrek
2: Frank's Take
In Shrek 2, we are gleefully reunited with the amiable pot-bellied giant and
his colorful crew of supporters that include his new wife Princess Fiona (Cameron
Diaz) and his old sidekick Donkey (Eddie Murphy).
(FILM REVIEWS)
Shrek
2: Mark's Take
There is distinctly less magic and fun in Shrek 2 as the title ogre has problems
becoming accepted by his in-laws. All the same cast is back with the same voices,
but the tone of the film is darker and we don't learn a lot more about the characters
that we liked in the first film.
(FILM REVIEWS)
Van
Helsing: Mark's Take
Not as bad as it might have been, but still no bargain. This is a fast-paced
and overblown CGI-fest that leverages off of the old Universal monsters but
does not actually want to use them. Writer-director Steven Sommers of the 'Mummy'
films handles action scenes well, but is poor with directing acting or even
giving us a very good story. This is a film of dubious thrills and no chills
whatsoever.
(FILM REVIEWS)
Van
Helsing: Frank's Take
In this film, our Frank finds an exceedingly glossy but empty-headed thrill-seeking
monsters mash mishap that boasts competent big-budgeted special effects but
little else.
(FILM REVIEWS)
Eternal
Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
Mark uncovers quite probably the best new science fiction film he has seen since
Minority Report and well before. A device allows for the removal of painful
memories by erasing them. The hitch is that the memories must be opened and
partially relived as they are being erased. Charlie Kaufman's third script is
demanding, but it is delightfully engaging, intelligent, and even profound.
(FILM REVIEWS)
Troy
Despite the showcasing of buff bodies clashing with conviction in this historic
sword and sandals fable, Troy is an elaborate action-adventure yearning to sweep
the moviegoer off their feet but the uneven rhythms sullies its energized scope.
(FILM REVIEWS)
Offworld
Report June 2004: Science Fiction and Fantasy
Interviews with Peter Crowther, Steven Brust, John Jarrold, Neil Gaiman and
the stars of Van Helsing; JG Ballard considers disaster movies, Stephen Baxter
dishes the dirt on the writing secrets of SF, and Octavia Butler ponders the
nature of power.
(NEWS)
Offworld
Report June 2004: Weird Science
The Pentagon's science fiction weapons program (railgun warships, anyone?),
space tugs, a robot built out of DNA, NASA's wilder dreams, the fantasy folk
seen in Scotland, and why we should be begging China for a decent space race.
(NEWS)
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