1. This article came after several instances of sexism in the Bulletin.
2. The Bulletin is the official publication of SFWA*, which makes it look like organizationally condoned sexism.
3. It's 2013, for fuck's sake.
One of the things that Resnick and Malzberg, as the authors of the piece in question, objected to was that people were unhappy that they were defining their peers as "lady authors/editors" and "gorgeous." These are, after all, factual definitions! A female peer is a lady peer. A beautiful woman is a beautiful woman. Don't women like being told that they're beautiful? Aren't we supposed to be precise when we talk about people? And to this I say sure, except that your precision is unequal and belittling. "Bob is my peer, Jane is my lady peer" creates two classes where two classes do not belong, and humans are primates, we're creatures of status and position. Give us two things and we'll always start trying to figure out which is superior to the other. Right or left? Up or down? Peer or lady peer? What's more, adding a qualifier creates the impression that the second class is somehow an aberration. "There were a hundred of us at the convention, ninety-nine peers and one rare lady peer."
No. Fuck no. "Bob and Jane are my peers." Much better.
As for the appearance thing...yeah, people often like to be told when they look good. But women in our modern world are frequently valued according to appearance to such a degree that it eclipses all else. "Jane was a hell of a science fiction writer...but more importantly, she was gorgeous according to a very narrow and largely male-defined standard of conventional beauty." All Jane's accomplishments, everything she ever did as a person, matter less than the fact that she got good genes during character generation. You don't think that burns? You don't think that's insulting? "Bob knew how to tell a good story, and he did it while packing an impressively sinuous trouser snake." What, is that insulting? How is it more insulting than "Jane could really fill out a swimsuit"? It's the same thing. If my breasts define my value to the community, you'd better be prepared to hold up your balls for the same level of inspection—and trust me, this is not sexy funtimes inspection, this is "drape 'em in Spandex and brace yourself for a lot of critique that frankly doesn't have a goddamn thing to do with how well you write, or what kind of human being you are." Don't like this idea, gentlemen of the world? Well, neither do the ladies.
It's very telling that you'll get people saying, again, "author and lady author are just true facts," but then getting angry when you say that fine, if they want divisions, it needs to be "male and female author." No! Male is the default the norm the baseline of human experience! How dare you imply anything different!
I, and roughly fifty percent of the world's population, would like to beg to differ. It's just that women get forced to understand men if we want to enjoy media and tell stories, while men are allowed to treat women as these weird extraterrestrial creatures who can never be comprehended, but must be fought. It's like we're somehow the opposing army in an alien invasion story, here to be battled, defeated, and tamed, but never acknowledged as fully human.
Does that seem like a lot to get out of the phrase "lady author"? It kinda is. But that's what happens when the background radiation of your entire life is a combination of "men are normal, human, wonderful, admirable, talented, worth aspiring to," and "bitches be crazy."
Am I disappointed that these sentiments were published in the official Bulletin of the organization to which I belong? Damn straight. It shows an essential lack of kindness on the part of the authors, who felt that their right to call me a "lady author" and comment on my appearance mattered more than my right to be comfortable and welcomed in an organization that charges me annual dues that are the same regardless of gender. Maybe if I got a discount for allowing people to belittle and other me? Only then I would never have joined, because fuck that noise.
At the same time, SFWA is a wonderful organization that has done and is doing a great deal to help authors, and moves are being taken to prevent this sort of thing from happening in the future. My membership is up for renewal at the end of this month, and I'm renewing, because change comes from both without and within. I am an author. I am a woman. I am not going to shut up and slink away because I feel unheard; if anything, I'm going to get louder, and make them hear me. (Please note that I absolutely respect the women who are choosing not to renew their memberships; voting with your dollars is a time-honored tradition. But everyone reacts differently. For them, this is a principled stance. For me, it would be a retreat. I am the Official SFWA Stabber, and nobody is making me retreat.)
One of the big points of the Resnick/Malzberg article was "anonymous complaints." Fine, then: I am not anonymous. My name is Seanan McGuire. You can look me up.
(*The Science Fiction Writers of America.)
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June 6 2013, 17:10:03 UTC 4 years ago
June 7 2013, 00:37:14 UTC 4 years ago
But we will get better.
June 6 2013, 17:10:46 UTC 4 years ago
2. I am interested in your thoughts and would like to subscribe to your newsletter.
3. Yep.
June 6 2013, 21:14:48 UTC 4 years ago
And Seanan, I say let's start handing out the banana hammocks and score cards to 'rate' the guys trouser snakes.
... and in general, it's author(s). There is NO gender distinction like there is with actor/actress, or with widow/widower. So I guess if there is ever a female president, are we going to have to refer to them as 'Lady Presdent'? Hell no. I'd like to see them try that with a female judge, too. "Not innocent, Lady Judge." Pfftfttttt! They'll end up in contempt of court in two shakes of a lamb's tail.
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June 6 2013, 17:18:56 UTC 4 years ago
Thank you for spelling out, so well, why that whole matter has been bothering me so much.
June 7 2013, 00:37:42 UTC 4 years ago
June 6 2013, 17:28:07 UTC 4 years ago Edited: June 6 2013, 17:30:05 UTC
I almost had to replace the keyboard. :-) I want to keep this quote, and love it forever.
May I repost the link to this on Facebook?
June 7 2013, 00:37:54 UTC 4 years ago
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June 6 2013, 17:41:55 UTC 4 years ago
Bravo! That entire paragraph is gold. One of my pet peeves (and biggest fears) is that people will look at me and think of me just as an ornament with no practical use. (This goes for girls just as much as guys.) I hate that. I hate it passionately. I want to earn approbation and respect for my work, my personality, or my character. I don't want to get handed semi-patronizing compliments for a body I inherited from my mom. Sincere compliments are nice, but my face really isn't that important, thank you. My face isn't the real me--it's the mind behind that mask. I'm a woman, not a mannequin. Rant ended.
I think I'll actually like the term "lady author," if in turn the guys are called "gentleman authors," and both terms are used with equal respect. Then we can all sit and have tea and discuss books. :)
June 6 2013, 20:22:31 UTC 4 years ago
Rachel Swirsky posted some entertaining speculation on this front.
http://rachel-swirsky.livejournal.com/2
(My fave is the Neil Gaiman one that someone put in one of the comments tho:
http://rachel-swirsky.livejournal.com/2
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June 6 2013, 17:43:24 UTC 4 years ago
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June 6 2013, 17:44:24 UTC 4 years ago
and for that matter, some male members of SWFA have bigger....
I once had to tell my youngest nephew that feminism was the quaint notion that women are people too, he was quoting some right winger about fem-nazi's, and he was misusing the word.
June 7 2013, 00:41:13 UTC 4 years ago
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June 6 2013, 18:01:22 UTC 4 years ago
And when they want to do the showing of the Spandex, please let everyone know, hopefully so I can avoid the sight / horror. Honestly, not interested in you in a bathing suit, either. Actually, Not Interested in pictures of any of the SFWA in spandex.
< sarcasm> Darn it, there are people that are paid for that. Let the professionals do their jobs! </>
2. If you're going to have a debate piece, then.. they should have had it be a debate piece. Not a one sided one. Which is what it sounds like. I know Jim had a piece that was about the cover pose of a prior magazine cover, but that doesn't count :)
Grain of Salt: I haven't read the articles at the center of the issue. (they weren't public when I last checked, might be now.)
June 7 2013, 00:41:53 UTC 4 years ago
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June 6 2013, 18:29:44 UTC 4 years ago Edited: June 6 2013, 18:30:45 UTC
ETA found it - at the bottom of this link: http://radishreviews.com/2013/05/31/lin
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Keep up the good fight! *cheers, waves pom-poms*
-The Gneech
June 6 2013, 18:47:50 UTC 4 years ago
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June 6 2013, 18:40:41 UTC 4 years ago
And it's not new. From the 1947 Dorothy L. Sayers essay “The Human-Not-Quite-Human”:
June 6 2013, 19:09:19 UTC 4 years ago
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June 6 2013, 18:52:52 UTC 4 years ago
Resnick and Malzberg are asshats.
That is all.
June 7 2013, 00:43:11 UTC 4 years ago
What you said
June 6 2013, 19:10:34 UTC 4 years ago Edited: June 6 2013, 19:23:57 UTC
I agree.
Plus, to say "gorgeous lady authors" implies the existence of "ugly lady authors". I would not say "Seanan is a two-legged author" unless there were bunches of one-legged or three-legged authors.
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Brava.
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June 6 2013, 20:33:51 UTC 4 years ago
THIS.
<3
June 7 2013, 02:42:54 UTC 4 years ago
June 6 2013, 21:01:00 UTC 4 years ago Edited: June 6 2013, 21:11:53 UTC
Imma just leave this here. (Warning, NSFW language. And folk music. Link from here)
June 7 2013, 02:43:07 UTC 4 years ago
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It's always hard for me to talk about sfwa, though, because, although I'm a member, I'm not an American, and whenever I venture an opinion, someone says 'it's the SF writers of *America*' right back, which means, pretty much, 'overseas members, pay dues and shut up'. I know this latter is not the official line, and is only a fdew noisy people, but it tends to make me keep silent. I should have written to them about that cover, though, and I wish I had, and from the excerpts I've seen from the Malzberg/Resnick article, I'm going to feel the same way about it. So count me in amongst the irritated female members.
Kari
June 7 2013, 02:43:38 UTC 4 years ago
Fuck them.
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