Showing posts with label oppression. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oppression. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 13, 2024

The Memory Librarian


 The Memory Librarian: And Other Stories of Dirty Computer by Janelle Monae (2022) 321 pages

This could almost be called a short story collection, except the stories are loosely linked. There are five contributors listed on Goodreads that helped Janelle Monae put each part of the story on paper. I listened to the audiobook with the first part narrated by Janelle Monae and the rest narrated by Bahni Turpin. Fans of The Handmaids' Tale would probably enjoy this. The stories take place in a near-future totalitarian state. Even though there is less overt religious involvement in the regulations of public and private life, all the main characters are labeled "Dirty Computers." Janelle Monae's third album was titled Dirty Computer. I had seen their series of music videos that form an "emotion picture" for this album when it was released about five years ago. In this world, Dirty Computers have there memories erased to force conformity. This totalitarian state targets queer people of color. Concepts of Intersectionality are explored in each story. It is suggested, but not made completely clear, that each story advances in time and involves characters from the previous story living their re-invented life after their memory wipe. There is sci-fi tech controlled by the state for surveying the population and very little power left to the ordinary person. I don't read short stories very often. Just as you get invested in one, it is over. I wish the separate stories were more connected like chapters of a whole. I became a bit frustrated trying to guess how each connected to the previous one. And I wish there was more world building description that referenced the visual design of the music videos.

Friday, July 31, 2020

Parable of the Talents

Parable of the Talents by Octavia Butler  448 pp.

Caution: Spoilers

This is the sequel to Parable of the Sower, the continuing story of Lauren Olamina and the refugees that escaped to northern California. Earthseed, the religion created by Lauren, believes the only way to save humanity is by moving to space. In the mean time they have created a village of Acorn where they are sustainably self-sufficient. Lauren discovers one of her brother Marcus survived the destruction of their Los Angeles home and he briefly lives at Acorn before leaving to make his own way in the world. However, the collapse of society and the election of a fanatical leader of the country has led to oppression and roving bands of members of "Christian America" attack and enslave people almost at random. When Acorn is attacked by one such group, many are killed, and the rest enslaved. The children, including Lauren's daughter are taken and given to adoptive parents who will raise them to be "good Christian Americans." Eventually Lauren and the others escape their captors and begin searching for their children. Unbeknownst to Lauren, her daughter ends up with Marcus who told her Lauren and the girl's father were dead. It is only many years later when mother and daughter are reunited. Earthseed is a continuing and growing movement and Lauren is a leader of it until her old age. This book is a hard read and I could only do small parts at a time because of the content. However, I think it is a book well worth reading.

Wednesday, March 6, 2019

Dancing in the Streets

Dancing in the Streets: A History of Collective Joy by Barbara Ehrenreich, 320 pages

Ever since people started trying to rule over other people, there has been a crackdown on instances of collective joy. Festivals or dancing or carnivals, religious or spiritual or cultural, symbolic or just plain fun — they've all been targets of oppression from colonizers and rulers dating back as far as the written word can detail it. In Dancing in the Streets, Ehrenreich gives an overview of the ways in which collective ecstasy has been tamped down, and posits theories about why collective ecstasy keeps bubbling back up. It's a fascinating book, tying together culture, religion, music, sports, and more from Dionysis to Burning Man. I'd love to hear her thoughts on more recent events, as the book was published back in 2006.