What follows is a brief excerpt from Alison Flood's 1-17-20
Guardian article entitled
"Sci-fi Magazine Pulls Story by Trans Writer After 'Barrage of Attacks'":
A
science fiction story that repurposed the transphobic meme “I Sexually
Identify as an Attack Helicopter” as its title has been removed from the
magazine Clarkesworld following a “barrage of attacks” on its transgender author.
Isabel Fall’s story, which was published in Clarkesworld
earlier this week and quickly went viral, opens as the narrator
describes how they “sexually identify as an attack helicopter”. “I
decided that I was done with womanhood, over what womanhood could do for
me; I wanted to be something furiously new,” Fall writes. “To the
people who say a woman would’ve refused to do what I do, I say – Isn’t
that the point?”
Some
readers felt the story was transphobic, with some accusing Fall of
being a troll. There was also a raft of positive reactions from writers
including Carmen Maria Machado and Phoebe North, who wrote an essay
praising the story: “Thank you for making me feel seen and heard. We
don’t get a lot of ourselves in fiction. We often only get scraps. This
was more than that. A mirror.” However, due to the criticism, Fall asked
Clarkesworld to remove the story from the monthly science fiction and fantasy periodical.
To read Flood's entire article, click HERE.
This second excerpt is from Conor Friedersdorf's 1-19-20 Atlantic article entitled "The Talented Victim Is Not the Point":
The National Book Award finalist Carmen Maria Machado declared herself
“crushed” and “angry” at “a trans sf/f writer being excoriated for
writing a messy, gorgeous, interesting story,” and defended “stories
that are dangerous, weird, jagged, ambitious,” because “art that bites
off more than it can chew” can variously “change your temperature,
provoke your heart, crack open your brain.” Sometimes, “what seems, to
you, to be a failed experiment is actually not a failed experiment at
all, and has provided someone else with brain-cracking or
heart-provoking or temperature-changing,” she continued, and sometimes
that value “only becomes clear in retrospect.”
Needless
to say—or maybe not—short stories that are ahead of their time will be
lost if their early critics succeed in creating an artistic landscape
where ostensibly flawed work is quickly disappeared.
The
science-fiction writer M. L. Clark urged better modes of engagement.
“When a work *unsettles* you, & you have misgivings about whether
the message is clear or ‘correct,’ absolutely, you should talk about it!
Name how it falls short for you!” he wrote.
“But also: allow it to be broken for you w/o asserting that its jagged
edges can *only* be used as a blade, NOT because we shouldn't resist
poor messaging, but because *effective* resistance doesn't just take the
form of vehement public outcry & denunciation.”
The Vox critic Emily VanDerWerff opined,
“This is a story with a lot––maybe too much––on its mind, and to see it
written off as agitprop is sad. Art that only celebrates the bravery of
trans people, or our fortitude in the face of all we must endure to be
ourselves, is fine. But art should embrace our weakness, our shame, and
our doubt, too. To insist otherwise is its own kind of prejudice [...].”
The
left, as distinct from the right, has long dominated high and low art.
To its credit, it has used that position in part to tell humanizing
stories about historically marginalized people that increase
understanding and empathy. America is a more inclusive place as a
result. But I don’t know that a salutary tradition running from the
films of Sidney Poitier to Will and Grace to Transparent and
beyond can endure if Millennial creators and succeeding generations
allow their art to be policed by the most essentialist, intolerant
voices; or if they are persuaded that deleting a piece of fiction is
more ethical than discussing it in the open if anyone at all feels
harmed by it; or that it is wrong to truthfully relate one’s own
experiences if they are in tension with political orthodoxies.
As Wesley Morris observed in an October 2018 essay:
Art
might not have the privilege of being art for art’s sake anymore … It
has to be art for justice’s sake … So we wind up with safer art and
discourse that provokes and disturbs and shocks less. It gives us
culture whose artistic value has been replaced by moral judgment and
leaves us with monocriticism. This might indeed be a kind of social
justice. But it also robs us of what is messy and tense and chaotic and
extrajudicial about art.
The
controversy over “Attack Helicopter” is another case study suggesting
that rejecting “art’s for art’s sake” in favor of “art for justice’s
sake” doesn’t necessarily yield more justice. It may help no one, harm
many, and impede the ability of artists to circulate work that makes us
think, feel, grapple, empathize, and learn. Americans will always seek
out, discuss, and be moved by art that is messy, tense, and chaotic,
whether the censors of any moment like it or not. If liberals stop
producing art like that, illiberals of all sorts will fill the breach.
To read the rest of Friedersdorf's article, click HERE.
If you want to read Isabel Fall's story "I Sexually Identify as An Attack Helicopter," you can find it right HERE.
This third excerpt is from Jane Ridley's 1-16-20 New York Post article entitled "Missouri Librarians Could Be Jailed for Loaning ‘Age-inappropriate’ Books":
Librarians in Missouri who loan “age-inappropriate” materials to children could face jail time if a controversial proposed bill is passed.
They would be forced to pay a fine or spend up to a year in prison if they refuse to comply with the proposed new rules designed to protect kids from sexual content.
Republican state Rep. Ben Baker wants panels of parents to decide what content is suitable for minors, with any public libraries that ignore the panels’ edicts stripped of funding.
His proposal has been attacked by critics as “a shockingly transparent attempt to legalize book banning.”
“The main thing is, I want to be able to take my kids to a library and make sure they’re not gonna be exposed to something that is objectionable material,” Baker told local news station KOAM. “Unfortunately, there are some libraries in the state of Missouri that have done this, and that’s a problem.”
Titles that have come under fire in Missouri over the past decade include the award-winning “Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian” by Sherman Alexie, which includes references to masturbation; Kurt Vonnegut’s profanity-laced “Slaughterhouse-Five“; and “Speak,” a young-adult novel by Laurie Halse Anderson about the rape of a teenager.
Tager said the planned move is “clearly aimed at empowering small groups of parents to appoint themselves as censors over their state’s public libraries.”
He added that books containing sexual themes, LGBTQ characters and explorations of the impact of sexual assault could be “on the chopping board if this bill is passed.”
“The fact that a librarian could actually be imprisoned for following his or her conscience and refusing to block minors from access to a book, that tells you all you need to know about the suitability of this act within a democratic society,” said Tager, PEN’s deputy director of free-expression research and policy.
To read Ridley's entire article, click HERE.
And now, a timely quote from the late Ray Bradbury....
"War
begets war. Destruction begets destruction. On Earth, a century ago, in
the year 2020 they outlawed our books. Oh, what a horrible thing--to
destroy our literary creations that way! It summoned us out of--what?
Death? The Beyond? I don't like abstract things. I don't know. I only
know that our worlds and our creations called us and we tried to save
them, and the only saving thing we could do was wait out the century
here on Mars, hoping Earth might overweight itself with these scientists
and their doubtings; but now they're coming to clean us out of here, us
and our dark things, and all the alchemists, witches, vampires, and
were-things that, one by one, retreated across space as science made
inroads through every country on Earth and finally left no alternative
at all but exodus."
--Edgar
Allan Poe speaking to the ghosts of Charles Dickens and Ambrose Bierce
in Ray Bradbury's short story "The Exiles" (collected in THE ILLUSTRATED MAN, 1951)