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Showing posts from April, 2020

Week Thirteen : Literary Speculation

OMG! FUN! I absolutely love Italo Calvino’s work. For my concept class, sophomore year, our final project was to create a visual excerpt from one of his novels, Cities and Signs. I focused on an isolated city that he described in his book called Zoe. Here’s a link to that animation if you're interested in checking it out. This week I read Italo Calvino’s short story, The Distance of the Moon . I thought it was very cute. It reminded me a lot of Pixar’s short animated film, The Moon (La Luna) . It also gave me The Little Prince vibes. The story was told in a somewhat fantastical way. What I gathered from the reading was the overwhelming theme of desire and longing but I didn't see it as a requinted love story. The narrator, Qfwfq, speaks openly about his ‘lust’(more like unhealthy infatuation) for the Captain’s wife. He only sees her for her body. Not once did he mention anything about her personality. Even at the end Qfwfq states, “I could distinguish the shape of he

Week Twelve : Afro-Futurism & Diverse Position Science Fiction

1. What is your reaction to the text you just read? Reading Bloodchild by Octavia Butler, was confusing. The story is so complex. It took me a while to understand that the Tlic were an alien species. I had a lot of ‘Wait. Woah. WHAT?!’ moments. I was also taken aback when I realized that certain gender roles are switched. It made me really uncomfortable when I realized that Gan, a male human child, was going through all sorts of traumatic stuff at such a young age. 2. What connections did you make with the story? Discuss what elements of the story with which you were able to connect? I see the story as a statement. Butler Plays with themes of power dynamics. The historical connections that the story alludes to remind of child marriages in the 1800’s. In addition to all that, the story also weirdly reminded me of the YouTube animated series Don’t Feed the Humans . Don’t Feed the Humans is a comedy about a group of humans who have been abducted and brought to an alien

Week Eleven : Cyberpunk & Steampunk

This week I decided to read Ready Player One written by Ernest Cline. Although the description for Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson was fairly interesting, I felt far more comfortable reading Ready Player One. I absolutely adore the film. Ever since I watched it, I'd been meaning to get my hands on the book. It's been in the back of my mind for a while, but I hadn't had the time to read it... UNTIL NOW. It was an enjoyable read. I was surprised by how much of the book was felt out of the film. I have to say that I enjoyed Samantha’s/Art3mis’s character wayyyyyy more in the book. She had much more self-assurance than in the film, she is a cyberpunk heroine; a protector and a complete badass. Sure, Samantha describes herself as ‘hideously deformed’ in the book but her sassy personality never ceases. The film, on the other hand, shows her confidence being severely affected by the birthmark. In the film, Samantha’s speech pattern is more hesitant and she appears to be visu

Week Ten : Narratives from the Multiverse

This week I decided on reading Samuel R. Delany ’s short story, Aye and Gomorrah (1967). I visited its Wiki and read its synopsis… I read the word ‘androgonous’ and that’s all I needed. I'm all about androgonous characters. I LOVE EM’! Samuel R. Delany , you have grabbed my attention. Sign me up. So anyway, yeah, I read it and WOW. It was a SUPER short read. I finished it in just 15 min. And, sadly, I ended up wanting more. I was so immersed in the world, I just want to know more about it; how things work. What I found most interesting within the short story is how homosexuality is accepted in this universe. Delany is very much open to the themes of sexuality and gender within his works. Though, upon first reading the short story, the topic of sex had caught me by surprise. I’ve read a lot of queer works but never would I have thought that Delany’s short story would be so progressive for it’s time. It was published in the 60’s, WHAT?!?!? That’s INSANE! I'm just wonderin