The Palm Beach Post

FEMINIST FICTION CHANNELS RECENT RAGE

- By Alexandra Alter © 2018 New York Times

On a desolate island, three sisters have been raised in isolation, sequestere­d from an outbreak that’s causing women to fall ill. To protect themselves from toxins, which men can transmit to women, the sisters undergo cleansing rituals that include simulating drowning, drinking salt water and exposing themselves to extreme heat and cold. Above all, they are taught to avoid contact with men.

That’s the chilling premise of Sophie Mackintosh’s unsettling debut novel “The Water Cure,” a story that feels both futuristic and like an eerily familiar fable. It grew out of a simple, sinister question: What if masculinit­y were literally toxic?

“The Water Cure,” which comes out in the United States in January and was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize, joins a growing wave of female-centered dystopian fiction, futuristic works that raise uncomforta­ble questions about pervasive gender inequality, misogyny and violence against women, the erosion of reproducti­ve rights and the extreme consequenc­es of institutio­nalized sexism.

For Mackintosh, those questions don’t feel abstract.

“Building off the idea of toxic patriarchy, I decided to make it more solid and physical, because sometimes it does feel physical,” said Mackintosh, who lives in London. “I felt like I didn’t need to invent a disaster, because there was already a disaster happening.”

This new canon of feminist dystopian literature — which includes works by up-and-coming novelists like Mackintosh, Naomi Alderman, Leni Zumas and Idra Novey, as well as books by celebrated veterans like Louise Erdrich and Joyce Carol Oates — reflects a growing preoccupat­ion among writers with the tenuous status of women’s rights, and the ambient fear that progress toward equality between the sexes has stalled or may be reversed.

Most of these new dystopian stories take place in the future, but channel the anger and anxieties of the present, when women and men alike are grappling with shifting gender roles and the messy, continuing aftermath of the MeToo movement. They are landing at a charged and polarizing moment, when a record number of women are getting involved in politics and running for office, and more women are speaking out against sexual assault and harassment.

At a time of increased unease about parity between the sexes, both new and classic dystopian novels seem to be resonating with readers and critics. Alderman’s novel “The Power,” a twisted feminist revenge fantasy set in a world where women develop the ability to deliver an electric shock, has sold hundreds of thousands of copies and is in developmen­t as a television series.

At the same time, readers are embracing classics of the genre that have taken on new significan­ce in today’s political climate. Margaret Atwood’s 1985 novel “The Handmaid’s Tale,” set in a future theocratic state where women are treated as reproducti­ve slaves, has sold more than 3.5 million copies in the United States since 2017, bringing total sales to more than five million, and was adapted into an awardwinni­ng television series.

Lately, Atwood’s imaginary dystopia has inspired real-life political activism, as protesters dressed as handmaids in red robes and white bonnets have gathered at state capitols around the country to oppose policies that restrict women’s access to abortion and health care. In September, a group of red-robed women protested at the United States Senate during hearings for Brett M. Kavanaugh, who was confirmed to the

At a time of increased unease about parity between the sexes, both new and classic dystopian novels seem to be resonating. At the same time, readers are embracing classics of the genre that have taken on new significan­ce in today’s political climate. Margaret Atwood’s 1985 novel ‘The Handmaid’s Tale,’ set in a future theocratic state where women are treated as reproducti­ve slaves, has sold more than 3.5 million copies in the United States since 2017.

Supreme Court after being accused of committing sexual assault, and could potentiall­y cast a decisive vote overturnin­g Roe v. Wade.

“The moment that we’re in is terrifying for a lot of women, and the story that Margaret Atwood created captures that fear so incredibly well,” said Lori Lodes, an adviser for Demand Justice, a liberal advocacy group that organized the recent protests at the Senate.

‘Progress is a fantasy’

Women have been writing dystopian fiction for decades. Some of the most influentia­l female pioneers in science fiction and fantasy, including Ursula K. Le Guin, Octavia Butler and Angela Carter, used the genre as a framework to write about gender identity and its constraint­s.

The recent proliferat­ion of feminist dystopian works builds on that body of literature, using the lens of science fiction to project current concerns onto the future, while also reflecting on the past.

“They’re in a way how-to books, or what-would-I-do books: Supposing this happened to me, what would I do?” Atwood said in an interview. “The idea that history will always progress is a fantasy.”

Some of the novels are meant to serve as cautionary tales against political inaction and complacenc­y, and as a warning that steps toward women’s equality may one day be curtailed.

In her new novel “Hazards of Time Travel,” coming out in November, Joyce Carol Oates takes an almost literal approach to exploring fears that the clock could be turned back on women’s rights. The novel opens in a future autocratic America, where students are taught that men have higher I.Q.s than women, and centers on a young woman who is arrested for treason after she raises questions about the regime in school. As punishment, she gets teleported back to 1959 Wisconsin to be “re-educated” and rendered more docile.

In Christina Dalcher’s recent debut novel, “Vox,” an ultraconse­rvative political party gains control of Congress and the White House, and enacts policies that force women to become submissive homemakers. Girls are no longer taught how to read or write; women are forbidden to work or hold political office, or even express themselves: They are forced into near silence after the government requires all women to wear bracelets that deliver a shock if they exceed an allotted daily word count.

Dalcher, a retired theoretica­l linguist, said she was inspired in part by the women’s marches around the country after the 2016 election.

“I thought, there must be a ton of people who are watching this and rolling their eyes and saying, I wish they would just shut up,” she said. “What better way to force somebody into submission than to take away the one thing that makes them human, language?”

‘We are already in a dystopia’

Like “The Handmaid’s Tale,” several recent dystopian novels explore how a woman’s fertility can define her worth in society’s eyes, and consider what might happen if the government mandates and controls childbeari­ng.

Leni Zumas was struggling to become pregnant when she began writing her recent novel “Red Clocks,” which takes place in a nearfuture America where abortion and in vitro fertilizat­ion are illegal and embryos are enshrined with the “right to life.” The idea came to her when she was researchin­g fertility treatments, and came across references to proposed legislatio­n that would outlaw in vitro fertilizat­ion.

“It was very intentiona­l to make the situation in the novel feel ordinary, and therefore more frightenin­g,” she said. “One of the things about looking at the world through a feminist lens is that we are already in a dystopia.”

Louise Erdrich puts a more apocalypti­c spin on the themes of reproducti­on and women’s physical autonomy in “Future Home of the Living God,” which hinges on a cataclysmi­c biological event that threatens the future of humanity, leading the government to round up pregnant women and seize their babies.

Erdrich began writing the book many years ago, when she was pregnant with her fourth daughter. She set it aside until shortly after the 2016 presidenti­al election, when, with a Republican­controlled Congress and White House, liberal activists raised alarms about the potential threat to women’s reproducti­ve rights. Erdrich began to worry about what the world would be like if the gains made decades ago through women’s liberation movements were lost.

“Fighting for women’s rights is an unrelentin­g battle,” Erdrich wrote in an email. “I saw that my daughters might have to live with the steady erosion of human progress.”

‘Worse than ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’’

The surging interest in female-centered science fiction has spread beyond North America and Britain. While Western novelists are using dystopian tropes to explore what might happen if hard-fought advancemen­ts for women’s equality are reversed, some writers from the Middle East and Asia have turned to dystopian fiction to highlight the oppression of women in the region.

Maggie Shen King’s debut novel, “An Excess Male,” takes place in China in 2030 and imagines the aftermath of China’s former one-child policy, a rule that led to sexselecti­on abortion of female fetuses. In Shen King’s novel, the policy has resulted in a surplus of 40 million men who can’t find wives, and women are forced by the state to marry multiple husbands.

A similar thought experiment drives the Pakistani writer Bina Shah’s new novel, “Before She Sleeps,” which unfolds in an autocratic southwest Asian country after a nuclear war has caused a genetic mutation that unleashed a deadly strain of cervical cancer, killing millions of women. As part of a government effort to rebuild the population, women are forced to marry multiple husbands and required to take fertility drugs that cause them to give birth to triplets and quintuplet­s. Shah got the idea of a “gender crisis” from news reports about sex-selection abortion and female infanticid­e in India and China. She envisioned a society, like many traditiona­l and tribal ones, that prizes women as “precious resources,” but still oppresses them.

“In patriarchy, women are always going to end up being the losers,” she said. “What’s going on now in Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and Afghanista­n is worse than what’s happening in ‘The Handmaid’s Tale.’”

For Atwood — who has become a sort of patron saint of feminist dystopian fiction, heaping praise on younger writers who are expanding the genre — it has been both inspiring and unsettling to see the resurgence of interest in “The Handmaid’s Tale,” as women’s rights activists have taken up the language and imagery from her novel as a cultural shorthand for misogyny.

“When I wrote the book, I wished we would not be in a situation where these protests would become necessary,” she said. “There’s certainly a very concerted push toward making women’s bodies a possession of the state in the United States.”

On the other hand, Atwood is comforted to see a growing number of people reading, and writing, dystopian fiction — a scenario that would be impossible under a real totalitari­an government that banned free expression.

“The mere fact that you can read it means we’re not there yet,” she said.

 ?? WIN MCNAMEE / GETTY IMAGES ?? Protesters, dressed in “The Handmaid’s Tale” costumes, outside the Senate hearing room where Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh testified. The handmaids, who wear red robes and white bonnets in the TV adaptation of the dystopian novel by Margaret Atwood, have inspired real-life political activism to oppose policies that restrict abortion and health care for women.
WIN MCNAMEE / GETTY IMAGES Protesters, dressed in “The Handmaid’s Tale” costumes, outside the Senate hearing room where Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh testified. The handmaids, who wear red robes and white bonnets in the TV adaptation of the dystopian novel by Margaret Atwood, have inspired real-life political activism to oppose policies that restrict abortion and health care for women.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS ?? A new genre of feminist dystopian literature is emerging, with books by new and veteran authors, including Joyce Carol Oates (top middle).
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS A new genre of feminist dystopian literature is emerging, with books by new and veteran authors, including Joyce Carol Oates (top middle).

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