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October 24th: Sci Fi in the Domestic Sphere


Announcements

  • Mon, Oct. 28th--last day to withdraw (W)
  • Note taker needed in this class
    Contact Disability Services: notetaker@uncc.edu
  • Midterm grades on Moodle2.
    Click on "Grades" on the left, and you should see your grades for Test 1 and the Midterm Exam. Add them together and divide by 150 to get you percentage. Your Midterm grade is based on those two grades (the grade you might see in 49er Express or Banner).

    For instance, these are your grades:
    Test 1--42 and Midterm Exam--88. (42+88) / 150 = 0.866666666666666666666 86% or a 'B'

    Your grade might be higher or lower depending on your weekly posts. If you've done all of them on time and posted at least 250 words, your grade is probably higher. If you've posted late, not at all, or can't figure out at least 250 words, your grade is probably lower.

Today's Plan

Obviously, I have to wake you up, so I guess that means I need to show you moving pictures. I'll try to incorporate that today. Also, as usual, I hope to disturb you by having us confront more cultural givens. Today, we'll talk about mundane domesticity, bored housewives, and nuclear radiation...just another day of LBST!

Judith Merril's "That Only a Mother" (1948)

Whoa! What's going on with that baby? Obviously, this story's title comes from the expression "a face only a mother could love," which means the face is not conventionally beautiful/attractive. Culturally, mothers are supposed to love their children no matter what, so a hideous chud's face is one only a mother could love. Implied in that phrase is that men, fathers, might not have the same affinity for children...care to take that one?

 

The Anthology Editors set us up nicely by telling us Merril's story was denigrated by phallocentric traditional sci fi authors who read it as a boring domestic story (p. 211). Of course, we know that they missed the social science fiction themes that the story conveys. Also, the Editors tell us: "[Merril] also issued harsh polemics against conventional hard sf, which, in her view, had grown moribund and was swiftly being displaced by a new breed of counterculture-inspired and experimentally sophisticated writing" (p. 212). In case that sentence wasn't clear enough, the Editors are calling hard sf--sci fi obsessed with the technology and science possibilities as opposed to the humanistic themes--easy and unsophisticated. You'll often hear how one writer or another "elevated" sci fi from its "pulp, space opera" past. Just reading for cool gadgets and far out places is entertainment; we're reading to think.

 

Key areas in the text

 

The fact that it's mostly written in letter-telegram style does something for the dramatic tension. How do we read this differently than traditionally narrated stories?

 

Living with THE BOMB

 

How were we told to "do our part" when the United States invaded Afghanistan and Iraq? How was that different from the ways citizens were supposed to support their country during World War II?

 

The new beautiful baby

  • When is it funny to joke with your spouse about infanticide (p. 214)?
  • "It's all true what they say about new babies and the face that only a mother can love" (p. 215)
  • Infanticide in Japan near Hiroshima and Nagasaki (p.218).
  • The baby talks and sings at 7 months!?! (p. 216) That's a bit unusual. Maybe the baby got the gamma rays like The Incredible Hulk.

We'll return to the metaphoric possible reading (interpretation) after we discuss the next story.

 

Pamela Zoline's "The Heat Death of the Universe" (1967)

 

A common definition of entropy is twofold: 1) chaos in isolated systems and 2) the more energy produced, the less useful it is. The second definition is why some equate entropy and inefficiency. The heat death of the universe.

 

In groups, you should discuss the following questions:

  • What are a housewife's socially prescribed duties? Are they realistic?
  • How is it possible Sarah Boyle doesn't know how many children she has?
  • Why are there multiple references to Sarah's being educated at "fine Eastern colleges"?
  • Why does Zoline focus on the Shakespeare (p. 417) and Mozart (p. 242) masks on the back of the cereal boxes?
    --the biggie--
  • Why does Sarah act out in a fit of rage and sadness at the end of the story?

Mother's Little Helper

Lyrics

 

Now that we've covered the two stories, let's see what links them. They're both stories about housewives. Although they're written nearly 20 years apart, there are some domestic similarities. Primarily, the housewives are supposed to take care of the house and children. Margaret (Maggie) has a job, but she's allowed to work to support the country's war effort. She's taking care of the baby, but, the husband is shocked to find out that "she didn't know..." (p. 220).

 

Consider the following for discussion:

  • Denial and self-delusion
  • Infanticide to protect the mother
  • Metaphor of Domestic Life as not fulfilling in this patriarchal culture

Next Week

Keep up with your reading. On Tuesday (10/29), we'll discuss Octavia Butler's "Speech Sounds" (1983) and Misha Nogha's "Chippoke Na Gomi" (1989). Of course, Test 2 is next Thursday (10/31)...Happy Halloween!

 

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