melannen: Commander Valentine of Alpha Squad Seven, a red-haired female Nick Fury in space, smoking contemplatively (Default)
melannen ([personal profile] melannen) wrote2009-05-07 05:43 pm

On Age of Sail, American fantasy, RaceFail, and history.

One of the things I resolved after reading everything in RaceFail09 (so far) was to stop being silent out of fear. Being silent out of not knowing what to say, or having nothing helpful to say, is a different matter. But if an issue like that touched me directly, I needed to speak up. (link to disclaimer because I'm still kind of chicken.)

Well, it has. You see, I committed, tomorrow, to writing a fandom guide post for [community profile] age_of_sail in order to get people to read Patricia C. Wrede's magical Regency romances. I've got it nearly ready to go. I love the books, like I love everything Wrede's written, and I'd love to see people writing in them. But now I'm starting to wonder if I should even make the post, or if I should write something entirely different, and much more difficult, instead.

You see, Tor is failing at race again, and this time the author who wrote the book of faily is Patricia C. Wrede.

The book is titled "The Thirteenth Child", and the one-line summary which is going around about it, excerpted from Jo Walton's entirely positive review, is "This is an alternate version of our world which is full of magic, and where America (“Columbia”) was discovered empty of people but full of dangerous animals, many of them magical."

I hope most people reading this can see, if they at least stop to think, the problem inherent in "America was discovered empty of people but full of dangerous animals". In terms of, you know, completely erasing all non-European inhabitants, and all of the very important, very terrible, and too-often invisible history that they were a part of. If you don't get it, I commend you to the critical links that [personal profile] naraht has been gathering, most of them by people who (unlike me) would not have existed in a world where the Americas were empty, and most of them far better able to speak on that aspect than I am.

I do want to point out that there are a few misconceptions going around: it's a very new book, and I don't know that any of the commenters except the other SF authors who are involved (Jo Walton and Lois Bujold, so far) have actually read the book. But, from what I've culled, it is *not* a European-dominated world - African people have played a large and active role in settling this world, and play a reasonably large role in the story itself, even if it doesn't get to be their story.

Also, Wrede didn't decide to erase the pre-existing populations just because she wanted an empty America; what she wanted, at least according to Bujold's comments, was an America with mammoths and other extinct megafauna, and she decided that the "Overkill Theory" was the way to go -- the idea that pleistocene megafauna were wiped out by wasteful prehistoric big game hunters, much like the holocene megafauna were nearly wiped out by historic big game hunters. So you take away the natives in order to let the animals survive.

This isn't an excuse. In fact, it almost makes it worse. The thing about the Overkill Theory is that it's pretty clearly wrong - neither the timing of the extinctions, nor the existing archeological evidence, supports the idea much at all. And it's pretty clear that the only reason the theory had much currency in the first place is that it shored up a racist, sexist, Eurocentric theory of the settlement of America as being by savage, nomadic bands of male hunters. And the only reason it ever had currency in the first place was because the white male archeologists only looked for evidence that would support it, and ignored everything else.

*Most* scientific theories that make it to an independent popular narrative, I have noticed, are the ones that shore up racist, sexist, classist stereotypes. I wonder why. So Wrede had a nifty idea based on a bit of science, realized it was predicated on writing an America without Indians, and then proceeded to write an entire book about it without bothering to either a) notice, or b) engage with the people pointing out the major, major issues with that theory on many levels. Why, one must ask, would an SF writer engage that uncritically with science? And the only realistic answer is because Science! gave her a guilt-free excuse to erase Native peoples and write what made her comfortable instead.

So now I'm sitting here, with an obligation to write a post fangirling Wrede tomorrow, and forced to confront that fact that Wrede's writing is, frankly, pretty damn unfriendly to everyone but White people. This wasn't a new realization; it's endemic to 'traditional' Fantasy writers, and Wrede doesn't escape that trap (though in my vague memories of her adult fantasy Lyra novels, she did make an attempt to write about Romani-analogue people that wasn't completely barf-worthy, and at least tried to engage with slavery, though never too directly.) In her YA work, though, I can't think of a single story with characters that are anything other than white.

The posts about "The Thirteenth Child", I'll note, weren't a sudden slap in the face, more the last straw. I can no longer blithely not notice this stuff, and with the recent discussions around race in steampunk, and the other AoS reading I've been doing lately, it's been building and building. It doesn't help that one of the most-recced Mairelon fics out there is about the Mechanical Turk. It's not that Mairelon, in general, is worse than your average Regency romance or sailing historical. It's that your average Regency romance ignores the thing entirely too, and the sailing books are better but on average not great. And it's that that Mairelon does so directly, yet gently, confront gender and class in the period, and does an awesome job with older female characters, which are some of the things I adored about it, and yet mentions race and imperialism not at all.

So - is it possible for me to write that post tomorrow about how well she does classism and genderism and ageism - the ones that affect me personally - and keep ignoring the issue of race? Is it possible for me to make that post and acknowledge the race problems without turning it into a post about race in AoS? I'd been leaning toward the answer being I probably should mention it, but I can probably get away with continuing to gloss it over. After hearing about The Thirteenth Child, I have realized that no, I can't make the post without talking about race, in any sort of good conscience. And that if I do talk about race in Wrede and in regencies, I'll have to engage the question about race in Age of Sail stories in general, a thing which I am in no way qualified to do.

One way I can to talk about it, though, is in terms of the American story and the idea of writing American fantasy. Writing the great American fantasy is one of my most enduring interests - my initial reaction to [livejournal.com profile] deepad's I Didn't Dream of Dragons was "you know, I didn't dream of dragons either." Which would've been completely derailing to that discussion, but - yeah, American kids get their fantasy through a veneer of 'Western Europe is the only place that matters', too, and for much of my childhood, I searched unsuccessfully for a fantasy world that I felt like I could get to without crossing an ocean, that felt like an American story in the way so many of the non-fantasy YA novels I was reading did.

Being unable to find one, I repeatedly attempted to write one. (I suppose even my first recorded novel attempt - in which my special stuffed animal, K.B., runs an underground network helping to repatriate other stuffed koalas back to Australia - is, in its own six-year-old way, a meditation on that theme.) I tried several times to create a world with the shape of a European fantasy - cities and peasants and nobles and schools of wizardry - and put it on a made-up world with llamas but no horses, dogs but no cats, and properly fierce badgers, brown-skinned people and yams. It never worked, even when I added vaguely appropriated bits of Native American magic and culture. I wonder why. (The one YA story I found as a child that tried this in any mildly successful way was T. A. Barron's The Ancient One, which probably reads as dated and appropriative to me now. Plus all the other books in the series were about Merlin rather than the spirits of great Redwood trees, which even when I was nine was disappointing.)

Then I tried to create an alternate-history story that was actually about Americans, about a world with magic and mammoths (and worldwide smallpox immunity) where Europeans came to an America that was quite ready and willing to stare them down and send them back home, and interesting things happened in the process. The story that Orson Scott Card basically dared someone to write in response to "Pastwatch". Ten years and a college degree in worldbuilding later, and I've only touched the edge of the learning I'll need in order to do that story justice.

Along the way, though, I found the first story that really hit me as a resonant, and honest, but still fun and hopeful and happy fantasy of America. It was Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl. A world of diversity and possibility and magic and new vistas for everyone, where freedom was there for you to grab if you were willing to grab it - and willing to abmit that grabbing it meant trampling other people on your way.

The later Pirates movies did somewhat more obviously badly with issues of diversity, and as they approached more closely to showing colonialism in action, the failure to show the ugliest bits was harder to ignore. But I did a lot of reading in the wake of PotC on the actual history of the Golden Age of Piracy, and I'm still kind of in love with it. Pirates *is* the fantasy world of my American heart, I think. It explicitly acknowledges the human evil that the dream is built on, but it says that the freedom is worth it, and then refuses to let freedom be anything but an individual choice, and a hard choice, regardless of race or class or gender or sexuality.

This is obviously not what everybody gets out of the Pirate history. But I do think that it is impossible to write the American fantasy I want if it pre-dates European contact - it might be a great story, and it might be a story that needs to be written, but the story of America that lives in me - and most Americans, I think - is the story in which the White people killed everybody else in the service of equality and justice for all. So the farthest you can really go, back into a dreamy mythical American past to build a fantasy archetype on, is the age of sail. The age of piracy. The age of slavery and conquistadors.

As I've been reading fic in pretty much every AoS fandom under the sun in making a crossover recs post (you can see what I've been reading over the past few days in my delicious tags), I've come to realize that, yes, what draws me into Age of Sail fandoms is when they talk about America. I was lucky enough to start reading Master&Commander fandom on the book where they're American POWs (and sneak out of Boston in blackface. Which is pretty much the only acknowledgement of racial diversity in the book.) I started reading Hornblower with a book they spent sailing around the Americas, too. Look! My continent exists! That's more than I'd get out of the average Regency romance. Or fantasy novel.

The stories I want to read and write in AoS are stories about America. Because as a White American who grew up on the East Coast, that's the time and place my myths are built of, that's the story that lives in the bones of my land. That's what I've got instead of dragons.

And you can't write honestly about America without writing about race.

And writing about race is really, incredibly hard. And part of the reason it's so hard is that so many people write around it instead of about it. And so we get accustomed to telling and hearing our own story with a gaping empty place in its heart, until we learn to not even notice it's there. Even, sometimes, the people who live in that blank spot learn not to notice.

I'm tired of stories with an empty space in the heart. And it hurts, every time, now that I've learned to notice the blank spot. And I don't know of any way to make it better, except to keep insisting on pointing it out when it's there, until it can't be invisible anymore.

...and this post is already far too long and rambling.

I still don't know what I'm going to do about my post tomorrow. But I'm going to do something, even if it's just link back to this post.

And in the meantime, I'm going to keep reading and discussing other peoples' posts about this. And thinking. And trying to be better. (After, of course, I do all the house chores I put off for two hours while writing this incredibly long post, omg.)

Disclaimer due to being chicken: I am still not very good at anti-racism. So if there's something in this post or its comments that is hurtful, and I recognize it, I will do my best to make it stop, but I can't promise that I'll automatically notice without being told. I can promise to listen if told, though.
crantz: Well, it's a person. With a bag on their head.  Perhaps they are sad? Perhaps they're just embarassed. It is hard to say (bag onna head by wendleberry)

[personal profile] crantz 2009-05-08 12:14 am (UTC)(link)
Aw man, Wrede. I have a ton of her old books on order right now. It's upsetting to hear this about her, especially since first nations stuff is pretty close to my heart.
trouble: "Aang can stay Asian and still save the world" (aang can save the world)

[personal profile] trouble 2009-05-08 12:27 am (UTC)(link)
How many times this year are we going to do this? Erasing whole swathes of people from your story and then going "Wait, what, that matters?" all innocent like? C'mon, it's 2009! Either own up and say "I don't care if I alienate people of colour/non-white readers as long as I can appropriate their stories!" or admit that you put your foot in your mouth but good and are sorry! If you didn't mean to harm others, then going "Damn,that was thoughtless" shouldn't actually harm you!!!
cypher: (port city market)

[personal profile] cypher 2009-05-08 12:37 am (UTC)(link)
--I am so glad that I am reading you again, right now. The connections you draw here, between fantasy as a genre and cultural mythologies and the prejudices that get written into (entirely too many of) these stories, are really thought-provoking. Thanks for posting.
damned_colonial: Convicts in Sydney, being spoken to by a guard/soldier (Default)

[personal profile] damned_colonial 2009-05-08 12:39 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks so much for posting this. I was fretting a bit about the [community profile] age_of_sail pimping post too, on your behalf. If you're still up for posting something, that would be awesome, and I think drawing on some of what you've written here would be very appropriate.

the book where they're American POWs (and sneak out of Boston in blackface. Which is pretty much the only acknowledgement of racial diversity in the book

That's factually incorrect; I've just re-read the book recently and can state this with confidence. But I don't want to derail too much. I'll just say... yeah, POB's series does better than most AoS fandoms at showing racial diversity, but it's still not great.

Mind you, I got into AoS fandom through having similar experiences to yours wrt America: I started writing M&C fanfic because my own place (Australia) was being left out of the books, and I was upset by it.
princessofgeeks: Shane smiling, caption Canada's Shane Hollander (Default)

[personal profile] princessofgeeks 2009-05-08 12:51 am (UTC)(link)
thank you.

I am a clueless white person who is just now starting to notice all the ways privilege affects me, and like you I'm trying to be more aware of what I have been ignoring in my fiction all this time.

I think it's encouraging that if we dig around and look, there WERE PoC in all those eras, all those fandoms, all those times, all those regions. The stories exist, and they are there to be told and retold and told through fiction (the lies that are true).

They've just been overlooked and whitewashed. But they are there and real.
morineko: Hikaru Amano from Nadesico (Default)

[personal profile] morineko 2009-05-08 12:52 am (UTC)(link)
I haven't read the book in question yet either, but please don't write a post pointing out the fail BEFORE you've actually read it?
staranise: A star anise floating in a cup of mint tea (Default)

[personal profile] staranise 2009-05-08 01:32 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you for this post! It makes me think a lot, and my brain doesn't work right now but I wish I could properly engage with how neat it is. My attempts to do so are all dulled by cough medicine.

(I agree with you, about stories about where one is from; I think I read cowboy novels partly because that's what my family's heritage is, more than my love for sagebrush and gunfights. It's being able to say, "This is my reality. It's important, and it has stories in it.")

I was going to say that AoS narratives don't deal with race because that shatters a lot of the fictions we have about that age, but that's not true, is it? It's there anyway, even if authors of that era didn't deal with it specifically, and it's a theme some authors like Naomi Novik or Susannah Clarke are starting to deal with in some fashion.

(Oh, I wish I had a brain.) What I want to know is, where are the stories that start to deal with PoC and America (as a continent) without whitewashing the history there? I can think of Charles de Lint as someone who's tried to do that, but it doesn't quite come close enough for me. I think he's another author that writes around race, and sometimes the circles he does are very informative, but doesn't put it at the heart of what he writes. It makes me wish I'd read more Thomas King.
princessofgeeks: Shane smiling, caption Canada's Shane Hollander (Default)

[personal profile] princessofgeeks 2009-05-08 01:44 am (UTC)(link)
so many things were left out an destroyed because "history is written by the winners." yeah.

but the work of reclaiming is certainly ongoing.
isis: Isis statue (statue)

[personal profile] isis 2009-05-08 02:18 am (UTC)(link)
Huh, the "people wiped out the megafauna" theory was certainly given credence in Alan Weisman's The World Without Us which was just published in 2007. (And I worry that saying, "indigenous peoples were too in tune with nature to have caused these extinctions" is patronizing and smacks of the "noble Red Man" stereotype.) But I agree that one doesn't need to wipe out the humans in order to preserve the animals. Especially since I live in a part of the country where pre-Columbian peoples had a strong and lasting effect on the land, I can't imagine this place without their legacy.
damned_colonial: Convicts in Sydney, being spoken to by a guard/soldier (Default)

[personal profile] damned_colonial 2009-05-08 02:45 am (UTC)(link)
I'm just about to post my own thoughts on AoS racefail with particular attention to the M&C book series. Interested to hear what you think.

In The Fortune of War, there are at least two race-related bits I recall: in one, the Bad Guy is a slave owner, and is cruel and violent to his slaves, and Stephen (POV character) dislikes him for it; in another, there is a Native American man working as a porter at the hospital, and Stephen, in his own racefaily way, greets the porter with "How!" every time he goes in or out, until the porter says, "Why do you keep saying How?" and Stephen says, "Oh -- I thought that was a greeting among your people" and the native guy says, "Um, no, not so much." That guy later helps with their escape.
isis: Isis statue (statue)

[personal profile] isis 2009-05-08 02:48 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I don't know enough about this issue to be authoritative. I do know that it's true in New Zealand (the Maori wiped out the moa, which caused the Haast's Eagle to go extinct, deprived of its food source) but I don't know a lot about North American prehistory.
damned_colonial: Convicts in Sydney, being spoken to by a guard/soldier (Default)

[personal profile] damned_colonial 2009-05-08 03:22 am (UTC)(link)
I was going to mention the moa, yeah. There's also a similar megafauna extinction in Australia, and similar debate about whether Aboriginal practices helped wipe them out.
flourish: A cup of coffee with a smiley face made of foam. (cheers)

[personal profile] flourish 2009-05-08 03:23 am (UTC)(link)
I really loved that part of the porter calling Stephen on his bullshit. I remember it so clearly because I was like "YES SCORE!"
flourish: (austen)

[personal profile] flourish 2009-05-08 03:26 am (UTC)(link)
I'm pimping Austen soon for [profile] ageofsail and actually part of what I'm going to talk about is why I feel strongly that Austen and other AoS stories need to cross over into each other in order to create fully satisfying stories for me!

I think the issue with Austen is that such things both Aren't Talked About and Don't Seem To Exist. I mean, as I understand it, English country society wasn't exactly diverse, even if the cities and the colonies were.
isis: Isis statue (statue)

[personal profile] isis 2009-05-08 03:36 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah, it makes sense that NZ (and other islands) would have a different mechanism, considering, you know, islands which developed in the absence of humans and then suddenly, humans!
flourish: Aubrey screaming with the caption "NOOO! They be stealin mah frigate!" (AoS aubreyad)

[personal profile] flourish 2009-05-08 03:40 am (UTC)(link)
When I think about it, I think part of the reason I was so attached to the Dragonriders of Pern series - yes, dragons! - was that it was about people traveling to a new country and colonizing it, essentially. Only the place they colonized didn't have any indigenous people to subdue, so one could feel much less guilty about it.

Anyway, this is an interesting perspective on it, and you're right, we need to get the fuck over our fears so we can actually address the problems we've got.

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