A Linkier World


I am loving the Tumblr "A Doctor World" which remixes the odd, philosophical phrases of the art-tragicomic-musing-on-the-universe comic strip A Softer World with images from Doctor Who. These range from funny and romantic to sad and uncomfortable – wonderful stuff.


Also, this week on the internet…


Jo Walton talks about child-markers in the Robert Heinlein juveniles.


An inspiring interview with Hope Powell, England football coach and all-around awesome woman. I was fascinated by honest descriptions of what it was like to be a West Indian girl who loved football in Britain in the 1970′s, and how she made it to the top of her field despite how marginalised women's football still is.


Tehani and Random Alex are doing a chronological read-along series of posts about Bujold's Vorkosigan saga – Tehani, like me, is a diehard Bujold fan, and Alex is reading the books (and loving them) for the very first time. I'm excited to follow along! Two posts up so far, Cordelia's Honor and The Warrior's Apprentice. NOBODY SPOIL ALEX.


For those of you just joining us, Cheryl does a bang up job of summing up the current gender discussion on the internet, centering around The Guardian, lists, Nicola Griffith and others.


The SF MindMeld, which hasn't had a brilliant record at addressing gender parity in the past but I believe has been working to improve, reiterates Griffith's idea of the Russ Pledge and asks What's The Importance of the Russ Pledge Today? Sadly, while most of the official respondents have the right idea and some interesting things to say, there are many commenters who seem offended at the very concept of giving women writers a fair go.


"Why I won't be taking the Joanna Russ pledge" by Athena Andreadis. Powerful, important post – I think she is somewhat unfair in her characterisation of the pledge and its usefulness but hard to argue with "I have been implementing it for the last forty-plus years."


Speaking of gender politics, Gail Simone has publicly commented on the lack of female creators involved in the DC reboot (even fewer than usual in comics) and tried to discuss it on Twitter with her fellow professionals. A warning: the comments on this one are beyond depressing.


A cool piece about the equal male-female balance on the writing team of TV show Community and how it worked out really well for them, though starting as an experiment imposed upon them. While there's a little bit of 'wow, we included women writers and they didn't suck, and actually it meant we had a team that had a wider range of views!' and I think there is some belittling of the idea that a good racial mix among writers would be just as important, it still feels like a step in the right direction.




"Thinking too hard" about The Hunger Games
, why the concept of the first book worked so well, and the subversive message it gives to teens, which goes beyond "be yourself" all the way to "if you have to pretend not to be yourself to anyone, chances are they are out to kill you."


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Published on June 16, 2011 16:38
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