ICFA 2009, Science Fiction, Space/Time, and Postmodernity Panel

March 20, 2009

Surprisingly, I woke up in time this morning to visit Starbucks for coffee and a piece of lemon loaf, return to my room for a shower, and arrive just in time for the 8:30am panel on SF, Space/Time, and Postmodernity.  David M. Higgins moderated the panel, which included Veronica Hollinger, DeWitt Douglas Kilgore, Megan Bygness, Neil Easterbrook, and Patricia Melzer.

Veronica, who I last spoke with last year as I was preparing for my fourteen hour drive back from the Science Fiction Research Association meeting in Lawrence, Kansas, devoted her opening statement to the growing crisis of representation in SF signaled by the unknowability of the future following the technologically transformative singularity or what some call the “spike” or the “rapture of the nerds.”  If, as some writers, critics, technologists, engineers, and scientists imply, the singularity takes place, then the world following the asymptotic leap will result in a radical change to human history that makes logical extrapolation (the hallmark of many SF definitions) impossible.  We will encounter what Vernor Vinge calls “the unknowable soon,” and any imaginative thought about what that future might be like is devoid of an understanding of how complete the change the singularity will constitute.  It is this point that I think may be the only knowable element of the singularity event.  

Dewitt, who made this his first ICFA visit, discussed the political potential of postmodern decenteredness, and how that decenteredness may be more desirable than modern positivist assumptions about progressive metanarratives.  He pointed toward political hope in a lack of center, because an unbounded world with no privileged center means that we need not be apprehensive of the past or future in constructing a better world.  Additionally, he said that we are bounded by space/time in the sense of our movements within the world and by the fact of our birth and death.  Furthermore, we believe that we know the end of the universe with mathematics and cosmological theory.  However, the real interesting and complicated bit was when he brought in Fred Hoyle’s steady state theory of the universe to discuss postmodernity.  During the q&a, he noted that the relationship between physical theory (i.e., relativity and total decentering) and the social world is problematic for talking about the social and political.  

Neil, who recently won SFRA’s Clareson Award (check), shared some thoughts on Mark Curie’s About Time, which concerns the concept of time embedded in narrative (something that might be useful for A.P.’s paper on time in fantasyland).  The three key concepts that he mentioned were David Harvey’s idea of space/time compression in the postmodern world, postmodern style and “accelerated recontextualization,” and “archive fever,” or the frenzied archiving of contemporary social life–the anticipating the future and storing it in the past.  It is the last concept that Neil found most interesting, because it is something that we see all around us with the way people (myself included) continually document the present for preservation in the past, or as Derrida wrote about it Archive Fever (which is actually about Freud), “domesticating topologies of the future.” 

Patricia, who I joined along with a bunch of other great folks for lunch the other day, talked about the queering of time and mentioned works including Edelman’s No Future and Halberstam’s A Queer Time and Place.  The important question here is how can we resist heteronormativity’s structuring of the future?  She asked, “can SF offer anything to queer time, or should we all go to the bathhouse?”  No one in the audience could come up with an example of SF that properly engaged queer time.  The closest that I could imagine while sitting there was Tom Godwin’s “The Cold Equations,” because the male pilot chooses to kill the young girl (the image of the child in Edelman’s work).  However, the pilot does this to save the lives of colonists (I don’t have a copy of the story with me now–were these miners or colonists?  Are the genders of the people on the planet mentioned?  An all male group would skew how this is interpreted).  The consensus was that we should all go to the bathhouse.

Megan wanted to engage the audience with a discussion of time in contemporary television–namely, Lost.  Unfortunately, very few audience members regularly watch that program.  She did mention the double narrative streams (on the island vs. flashback), and the time consumed in ancillary texts (logs, puzzles with hidden maps, etc.) meant to allow one to better understand the show on television.

Toward the end of the panel, I asked Veronica about her thoughts on Ray Kurzweil’s Singularity University (SU), which provoked some comments from the entire panel regarding the relationship between capital, technological innovation, and the singularity.  I’ve been interested in the impetus for SU, because I noticed in the online pre-application and follow-up application there is an emphasis on “leadership.”  I wonder if their idea of the singularity is one that can be controlled by capital and the market–leaders of industry or innovation, perhaps.  Or, it may be their belief that leaders may take us to the threshold and then what–take us through, push us over, or throw us off?  If the singularity is a profound and incomprehensible shift in the world and humanity’s place in the world, I’m not necessarily sure that I want the kinds of “leaders” that may be enlisted for SU.  Time, of course, will tell.


ICFA 2009, Pool Time and Prioritization

March 19, 2009

An important and essential aspect of my time at ICFA this year was more pool and sun time than last year.  I spent an hour swimming earlier, and it was very refreshing to get back into the water.  The last time that I went swimming was ICFA last year, and that was only a single night swim.  My waist line necessitated a slightly larger pair of swim trunks, so I’ll be damned if they don’t get properly broke-in during this trip.  

I walked down the main strip about a mile from the Marriott, and I found a Cracker Barrel and Starbucks.  After having supped on French toast, grits, and fried apples at Cracker Barrel, I’m relaxing at the near-by Starbucks with a grande Pike’s Place before walking the mile back to the hotel.  

While I was waiting for my grub in Cracker Barrel, I worked on prioritizing the remainder of my panel gazing at ICFA.  Tomorrow morning, I will participate in the SF Graduate Program panel at 10:30am.  Other than that, I think I am going to focus on author readings and get work done on a book review and journal essay that comes due next week. However, there is a panel on Saturday afternoon at 4:00pm that I need to attend on “East Meets West:  Colonialisms, Cultures, and Identities.”  I’ve already spoken with Janice M. Bogstad, who is presenting in that session, but I would like to invite the other panelists, Mayurika Chakravorty and Suparno Banerjee, to submit something to The Postnational Fantasy book project that I’m working on with my colleagues Swaralipi Nandi and Professor Masood Raja.


ICFA 2009, Fantastists’ Use of Time Panel

March 19, 2009

Following my early morning panel, I walked down the hall to the Maple room for the Fantastists’ Use of Time:  Erikson and Gaiman panel, chaired by Stefan Ekman of Lund University.  

Aidan-Paul (A.P.) Canavan of the University of Liverpool delivered an awesome presentation titled, “Time for a (Lack of) Change:  The Passage of Time in Fantasyland.  He combined keen observation with comedic wit in his essay about the static historical, social, and technological development of fantasy worlds that he described as “trapped in never changing amber.”  Generally speaking about the fantasy genre as a whole, his idea of static non-development in fantasy is compelling–i.e., why after eons of time and hundreds of generations combined with the interaction with other cultures and intelligent species such as elves have humans not emerged from the long Dark Age of the fantastic soul?    

A.P. was followed by the standing delivery of Scott D. Vander Ploeg of Madisonville Community College who read his essay, “Time for Gaiman:  The Overlap of Temporalities in The Graveyard Book and Other Fictions.”  Imagine a late 70s television detective with a tough mustache talking about Gaiman’s whimsical re-imagining of Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book (1894), and you’ll almost be there.  I enjoyed hearing about the additional intertextuality between Gaiman’s work and The Odyssey, but the really interesting part about his presentation was the marginal space inhabited by the main character.  Gaiman’s characters in many, if not all, of his works come to find him or herself in-between two worlds, parallel but asymptotically separated by a gap traversable by characters emblematically of the two worlds.  I need to run out and find a copy of The Graveyard Book, now!


ICFA 2009, Early Thursday Morning Panel Success!

March 19, 2009

I woke up bright and early today for my 8:30am panel at the International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts on “Narrative Aesthetics and Fractured Selves” chaired by Robert von der Osten.  My fellow panelists were Albert Wendland of Seton Hill University who read his paper titled, “Description in Andre Norton, or a Touch of the Sublime,” and Darja Malcolm-Clarke of Indiana University who read her essay titled, “The Postmodern Freak and L’Ecriture Feminine in Shelley Jackson’s Half Life.”  Albert has an impeccable radio drama-like delivery that is a rare gift among academic presenters.  His paper on the relationship between the self and the Romanticized sublime in the SF of Andre Norton convinced me that I have to read more of her work.  Darja’s engagement of Hélène Cixous’s theory of writing female bodies and subjectivity in connection with the postmodern females in Jackson’s novel was simultaneously enlightening and fascinating. 

My paper, originally titled “Time Enough for Twitter:  Postmodern Science Fiction and Online Personas,” but changed to “Literary Characters, Online Persona, and Science Fiction Scholars:  A Polemic,” was the last essay to be read during our panel, and it generated the most discussion among the daring early morning audience at our panel.  My essay critiqued the behavior of SF list participants, myself included, as either unwilling or incapable of engaging the alien Othered instigator of a flame war on the list by a sock puppet operator (read more about what inspired my research on this subject here).  Luckily, the frank comments and questions by Dewitt, David, and Anna were the right chord for my presentation.  I was called out on my leaving out the content of the email sock puppet instigator, but my purpose was to call attention to the end effects of parody rather than the substantive content of that parody–I was most interested in the instigator’s desire to shake things up and try something new.  The idea of reflectively reconsidering our real-life manners and norms that have been shoehorned into Internet and New Media communicative technologies is an important project for everyone, including SF scholars who regularly use email discussion lists as a means for discussion.  I found the questions and comments on my paper particularly useful for the next iteration of my paper, which I do want to send out for publication.  I believe that it is a compelling subject for more than its theoretical or literary connections–it has so much to offer our conceptions of how we work together as academic professionals, and it is bound to generate more conversation, which is the point of our discursively-oriented work within a community of scholars.


ICFA 2009 and Other Updates

March 11, 2009

Next week, I will fly down to Orlando, Florida for the 30th annual International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts where I will present a paper on Internet identity, online sock puppetry, and SF scholar email lists, and join a panel on graduate programs associated with SF library collections in which I will represent the University of Liverpool.

In anticipation of ICFA, I have a number of updates for DynamicSubspace.net that I will be making over the coming days prior to the conference.  And, I will report on the conference upon my return after I finish editing my Transformers/Global War on Terror essay for the inestimable Sherryl Vint.


IAFA 2008 Photos

April 4, 2008

I finally got around to posting my IAFA 2008 photos on Flickr.  I thought I took more photos, but I guess I was too busy making notes in the panels (which will see the light of day on this blog very soon).

View the photos here.


Back from IAFA 2008

March 26, 2008

I made it back to Kent on Sunday from IAFA 2008.  I consider the conference a great success, because my presentation on Transformers, the Global War on Terror, and the new post-9/11 SF Narrative went astoundingly well and I met some of the best folks in SF Studies!  I think the guy with TB on my return flight passed it on to me, because I’m fighting a sore throat and a cough.  I’m taking plenty of medicine and vitamin supplements, so I expect to pull through in a few days.  Expect updates this week summarizing my experiences at IAFA and the panels I attended.


IAFA or Bust!

March 21, 2008

My wonderful girlfriend, Yufang, drove me up to the Cleveland Airport so that I could catch a plane headed back down south to IAFA in Orlando, FL. I flew Continental Airlines, and I had a First Class seat. Normally I don’t fly First Class, but I waited too long to purchase my ticket and that’s all that was left for non-stop flights between Cleveland and Orlando. However, the price was more expensive, but the First Class experience (my first) was well worth it! I had a spacious seat, three glasses of red wine, a snack that included more wine, cheese, meat, crackers, and cookies (as opposed to just a packet of mixed nuts), and a fellow non-First Class traveler as my next-seat mate (a produce supply chain manager–not sure about his official job title, but it his work sounds interesting–though I had more questions than I was comfortable asking regarding modern farming and displacement practices).

After arriving at the Orlando Airport Marriott, I ran into Lisa Yaszek and Doug Davis who were on their way out to the pool. Later that night, I talked to two long-time IAFA-goers, Tim and Brian, at the opening reception. Then, I ran into Karen Hellekson and Craig Jacobsen, co-editors of SFRA Review. We all moved outside and had an enjoyable talk out on the dock behind the hotel on a large pond. While enjoying the night breeze, Taryne Jade Taylor joined us. If she’s representative of Florida Atlantic’s MA in English, SF and Fantasy track, then they must have an outstanding program! After the first exodus of bodies, Aidan-Paul Canavan lurked into the darkness under the gazebo. It was great seeing him again (he’s in the PhD program at the University of Liverpool).

What a great arrival to the conference–enjoying time with old friends and new!


Blogging IAFA 2008

March 20, 2008

I’m currently reporting from the first of three conferences I’m attending this year–the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts 2008 Conference. It goes by different names IAFA or ICFA. Look for posts detailing my first IAFA conference experience. The night’s young, and there’s a lot to recap on my first and second days here!

P.S. Fresh out of the “Politics and Singularity” panel, James Patrick Kelly and Ted Chiang walk into the bar. Hm, there might be a joke in there somewhere…


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