Around the Blogosphere: Worldcon Reports, Death of Print SF, Author Religions and Racism
News Editor
- SF Signal Has a Giant Round-Up of Worldcon Reports and Photos
- Warren Ellis Thinks the Internet Means the Death of Print Short SF … io9 Collects Links on the Emerging Debate
- Voting’s Almost Over for the Top 10 Obscure Works @ Feminist SF Blog
- Sassymonkey at BlogHer Asks, Thinking of Stephanie Meyer: Does An Author’s Religion Automatically Make Her Racist?
- Jeff VanderMeer Catches Up After the Shared Worlds Workshop at Wofford College
- Jason Ellis Wraps Up the Science Fiction Research Assocation’s 2008 Conference





1 • Nora said:
August 14th, 2008 at 3:41 pm, permalink
Posting here about the Stephanie Meyer article because the Sassmonkey blog requires registration and I hate it when blogs are set up like that –
I think Meyer’s books are poorly written, and one aspect of that poor writing is that she’s using a number of stereotypes in her characterization. Some of this is probably unconscious on her part — but a good writer questions his/her unconscious assumptions and tries to avoid lapsing into them (like any cliche). So while no one can say whether Meyer herself is racist — citing her religion as “proof” of this is kind of silly, and stereotyping in and of itself — I think it’s perfectly valid to point out the places in her fiction where she falls prey to the usual biased thinking that anyone raised in a racist society tends to do. That’s the kind of thinking that leads people to think Indians = close to nature = bestial = hey, the perfect werewolves! Without even realizing that in the process they’ve symbolically dehumanized a group of people.
This kind of thinking certainly can be reinforced by religious teachings, especially if those teachings are racist (and I don’t disagree that Mormonism contains some disturbingly recent examples of doctrinal racism), but more often it’s just reinforced by the subtle racism that permeates American society.
I think this is where Valdez-Rodriguez was trying to go, but she didn’t articulate it very well. =(