Why should you read sci-fi superstar Octavia E. Butler? - Ayana Jamieson and Moya Bailey

405,229 views ・ 2019-02-25

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Following a devastating nuclear war,
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Lilith Iyapo awakens after 250 years of stasis
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to find herself surrounded by a group of aliens called the Oankali.
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These highly evolved beings want to trade DNA
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by breeding with humans
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so that each species’ genes can diversify and fortify the other.
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The only alternative they offer is sterilization of the entire human race.
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Should humanity take the leap into the biological unknown,
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or hold on to its identity and perish?
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Questions like this haunt Octavia Butler’s "Dawn,"
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the first in her trilogy "Lilith’s Brood."
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A visionary storyteller who upended science fiction,
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Butler built stunning worlds throughout her work–
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and explored dilemmas that keep us awake at night.
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Born in 1947,
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Butler grew up shy and introverted in Pasadena, California.
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She dreamt up stories from an early age,
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and was soon scribbling these scenarios on paper.
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At twelve, she begged her mother for a typewriter
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after enduring a campy science fiction film called "Devil Girl From Mars."
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Unimpressed with what she saw,
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Butler knew she could tell a better story.
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Much science fiction features white male heroes
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who blast aliens or become saviors of brown people.
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Butler wanted to write diverse characters for diverse audiences.
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She brought nuance and depth to the representation of their experiences.
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For Butler,
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imagination was not only for planting the seeds of science fiction–
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but also a strategy for surviving an unjust world on one’s own terms.
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Her work often takes troubling features of the world
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such as discrimination on the basis of race, gender, class, or ability,
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and invites the reader to contemplate them in new contexts.
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One of her most beloved novels,
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the "Parable of the Sower,"
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follows this pattern.
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It tells the story of Lauren Oya Olamina
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as she makes her way through a near-future California, ruined by corporate greed,
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inequality, and environmental destruction.
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As she struggles with hyperempathy,
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or a condition in the novel that causes her to feel others’ pain,
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and less often, their pleasure.
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Lauren embarks on a quest with a group of refugees to find a place to thrive.
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There, they seek to live in accordance with Lauren’s found religion, Earthseed,
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which is based on the principle
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that humans must adapt to an ever-changing world.
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Lauren’s quest had roots in a real life event–
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California Prop 187,
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which attempted to deny undocumented immigrants fundamental human rights,
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before it was deemed unconstitutional.
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Butler frequently incorporated contemporary news into her writing.
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In her 1998 sequel to "The Parable of the Sower," "Parable of the Talents,"
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she wrote of a presidential candidate
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who controls Americans with virtual reality and “shock collars.”
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His slogan? “Make America great again.”
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While people have noted her prescience,
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Butler was also interested in re-examining history.
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For instance, "Kindred" tells the story of
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a woman who is repeatedly pulled back in time
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to the Maryland plantation of her ancestors.
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Early on, she learns that her mission is to save the life of the white man
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who will rape her great grandmother.
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If she doesn’t save him, she herself will cease to exist.
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This grim dilemma forces Dana to confront the ongoing trauma
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of slavery and sexual violence against Black women.
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With her stories of women founding new societies,
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time travelers overcoming historical strife,
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and interspecies bonding,
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Butler had a profound influence on the growing popularity of Afrofuturism.
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That’s a cultural movement
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where Black writers and artists who are inspired by the past, present and future,
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produce works that incorporate magic, history, technology and much more.
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As Lauren comes to learn in "Parable of the Sower,"
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"All that you touch you Change.
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All that you Change Changes you.
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The only lasting truth is Change.”
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