Thursday, 10 July 2025

Infiltration Intensifies!

 Once more, I dive into ‘Reactor’ magazine to get an idea of what is coming up in the world of science fiction, and once more, find that fantasy worlds and imagined alien societies for daring heroes and heroines to negotiate takes a back seat to …. this:


Even in the earliest stages of editing the anthology Amplitudes: Stories of Queer and Trans Futurity, I knew the book would open with an epigraph from the late queer theorist José Esteban Muñoz’s Cruising Utopia—where he argues that “the future is queerness’s domain.” Or, put another way: something about queerness is always “not yet here.

Really? It seems to be omnipresent, these days! Gone are the days I’d make a trip up to ‘Forbidden Planet’ in London to peruse the latest imports, mostly selecting titles by the quality of the artwork on the front cover (a dragon or alien big cat on the cover being a sure clue I’d like it!), secure in the knowledge that they were mostly written to enthrall the reader and sell copies, rather than push some personal sexual agenda. 

Speculative fiction, too, is grounded in thinking about what has been, what is not, and what could be. In sf, we imagine our way into other worlds and other futures! Given that, I think there’s a natural connection between queer/trans life and culture and speculative fiction itself—it’s in those horizons of possibility.

Relentless propaganda is what it is - I'm old enough to remember when sci-fi was a beacon of hope, written by people whose desire was to entertain, not proselytise. 

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

The great thing about a queer trans society is that it would disappear in one generation!

I always think that death duties are a queer trans thing, because these people don't have descendants to look after.

Anonymous said...

A dystopian novel by Anthony Burgess ("The Wanting Seed")

https://newbookrecommendation.com/summary-of-the-wanting-seed-by-anthony-burgess-a-detailed-synopsis/

deals with a world much like our own. When I read it (in the 60s) I was in my early 20s and was amused at the absurdities described. The tragedy is that in the UK we live in a world much like that portrayed.

Barbarus said...

Does anyone read that stuff at all, or does it just get placed prominently on bookshelves so house guests can note the host's impeccably correct politics? Might be interesting to compare the number of downloads, which would not serve that purpose, with physical copies sold.

I get my fix of SF usually from Baen Books. They usually stay clear of that sort of thing.

Barbarus said...

The film 'Demolition Man' is spookily prescient, too.