Carl Brandon Society blog

Weblog of the Carl Brandon Society, dedicated to improving the visibility of people of colour in the speculative genres of science fiction, fantasy, horror, magical realism, etc. (moderated jointly by CBS Steering Committee members).

Monday, May 22, 2006

imagineNATIVE Call for Submissions for Film & video, Radio, and New Media




Call for Submissions for Film & video, Radio, and New Media Deadline June 1st, 2006

The
imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival
is an international festival that celebrates the latest works by Indigenous peoples on the forefront of innovation in film, video, radio, and new media. Each fall, the festival presents a selection of the most compelling, distinctive Indigenous works from around the globe. The festival's screenings, parties, panel discussions, and cultural events attract and connect filmmakers, media artists, programmers, buyers, and industry professionals. The works accepted reflect the diversity of the world's Indigenous nations and illustrate the vitality and excellence of our art and culture in contemporary media.

imagineNATIVE considers film, video, radio and new media works made by Canadian and international Indigenous artists. The festival strives to represent a diversity of ideas, themes and genres in its programming. The festival prioritizes works that balance unique content, cultural and social relevance, and a creative approach to form characterized by innovative expression, distinctive style, and personal vision. Priority is given to works that have not yet been broadcast in Canada. International and Canadian premiere status is also a consideration. imagineNATIVE charges no submission fees.

All entries selected for the festival are eligible for awards. Awards presented in 2005 were as follows: $1000 Alanis Obomsawin Award for Best Documentary, Sponsored by the NFB; $1000 Best Dramatic Feature, Sponsored by CHUM TV; $1000 Cynthia Lickers-Sage Award for Emerging Talent, Sponsored by Vtape; $1000 Best Radio, Sponsored by Standard Radio Broadcasting; $1000 Best New Media, Sponsored by Vtape; $500 Best Short Documentary, Sponsored by CBC; $500 Best Short Drama, Sponsored by CBC; $500 Best Experimental, Sponsored by the Images Festival; $500 Best Music Video, Sponsored by imagineNATIVE.

Submission forms for film & video, radio, and new media are available for download from
the imagineNATIVE website.


imagineNATIVE is held in Toronto – this year’s dates are October 18-22, 2006

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imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

WINNERS OF FIRST CARL BRANDON SOCIETY AWARDS ANNOUNCED

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Pam Noles
Contact Us


May 17, 2006



WINNERS OF FIRST CARL BRANDON SOCIETY AWARDS ANNOUNCED

Awards ceremony Sunday, May 28, 8:45 p.m. at WisCon 30, Madison, WI, USA



Madison, WI -- Walter Mosley and Susan Vaught are winners of the debut awards from the Carl Brandon Society recognizing excellence and diversity in speculative fiction. Each winner will receive $1,000 and a trophy at a ceremony held at WisCon 30 in Madison, WI.



Mosley is awarded the Carl Brandon Parallax Award for his young adult novel, 47. The jury deemed this "a powerful, moving work appropriate for young adult readers and yet a good read for adults" with writing that "shows beauty in the depiction of people of great courage, character and creativity in the midst of impossible circumstances."


Vaught is awarded the Carl Brandon Kindred Award for her yhttp://www.blogger.com/img/gl.link.gifoung adult novel, Stormwitch, praised by a juror as "a fine work ... written as a young adult novel, it works for adults as well."



The CBS Parallax Award recognizes works of speculative fiction created by people of color. The CBS Kindred Award recognizes works of speculative fiction dealing with issues of race and ethnicity; CBS Kindred Award writers may be of any ethnic group.



CBS Parallax award jurors were Celu Amberstone, Steven Barnes, Karin Lowachee, MJ Hardman, and http://www.jenniferstevenson.com/. CBS Kindred award jurors were Jewelle Gomez, Ian K. Hagemann, Ursula K. Le Guin, Debbie Notkin and Cecilia Tan.


Each jury also released a shortlist of recommended works; juror commentary for each is below. (Complete short and long lists will be available at the CBS website).



Carl Brandon Society Parallax Award Shortlist

* Banker, Ashok , Prince of Ayodhya (Penguin India)

* Buckell, Tobias , Toy Planes (Nature, Oct. 13, 2005)

* Butler, Octavia E. , Fledgling (Seven Stories Press)

* Chaponda, Daliso , Trees of Bone (Apex Science Fiction and Horror Digest, #3)

* Douglas, Marcia , Marie-Ma (Femspec, Vol. 6, #1)

* Goto, Hiromi, Nostalgia. (Nature, Sept. 1, 2005)

* Jemisin, N.K., Cloud Dragon Skies (Strange Horizons, Aug. 1, 2005)

* Jennings, A.H., Owasa (Farthing, July, 2005)

* Johnson, Alaya Dawn . Shard of Glass (Strange Horizons, Feb. 14, 2005)

* Khan, Ahmed, The Meaning of Life and Other Clichés (Another Realm, March, 2005)

* Nyoka, Gail, Mella and the N'anga: An African Tale (Sumach Press)

* Okorafor-Mbachu, Nnedimma , Zahrah the Windseeker. (Houghton Mifflin)

* Shawl, Nisi, Wallamelon (Aeon Magazine, #3)

* Singh, Vandana, The Tetrahedron. (Intranova, March 15, 2005)





Carl Brandon Society Kindred Award Shortlist

* Buckell, Tobias, Toy Planes (Nature, Oct. 13, 2005)

* Butler, Octavia E. , Fledgling ((Seven Stories Press)

* Chaponda, Daliso , Trees of Bone (Apex Science Fiction and Horror Digest, #3)

* Gilks, Marg, Before the Altar on The Feast of All Souls (Tesseracts 9)

* Mosley, Walter, 47 (Little, Brown)

* Okorafor-Mbachu, Nnedimma, Zahrah the Windseeker (Houghton Mifflin )

* Williams, Liz, La Gran Muerte (Asimov's Science Fiction, April 2005)



The Carl Brandon Society began in 1997 at WisCon 23 as an informal gathering of people dedicated to addressing the representation of people of color in speculative fiction. It is named after the fictional black fan "Carl Brandon, Jr.," who was created in the mid-1950s by Terry Carr and Peter Graham, just as the Tiptree Award is named after writer Alice Sheldon's pseudonym "James Tiptree, Jr." Much as Alice Sheldon played with concepts of gender in her writing as Tiptree, so did Carr and Graham challenge concepts of race when writing as Brandon.



Among its activities, the society administers the Octavia E. Butler Memorial Scholarship Fund, which enables writers of color to attend one of the Clarion writing workshops where the acclaimed writer got her start.



As speculative fiction increases in diversity, the Carl Brandon Society will work to raise awareness of issues of race, ethnicity and culture within this genre we all love, fostering a needed dialog.



We have many ways for you to become directly involved, and our membership is open to all ethnicities. Visit our website for more information.


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Awards Administrator
Carl Brandon Society



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Selected jurors' comments on the winning and shortlisted titles (the full text of shortlist comments as well as the long lists will be posted on the Carl Brandon Society website.):

PARALLAX AWARD FINALISTS * PARALLAX AWARD FINALISTS

WINNER

47, by
Walter Mosley. (Little, Brown)
A powerful, moving work appropriate for young adult readers and yet a good read for adults. It is unflinching in its portrayal of slavery in the American south. A young slave boy narrates this electrifying account of how he met one of the mightiest heroes of African-American legend, High John the Conqueror, who is much more than he appears to be, and the marvelous and terrible changes John wrought on a life so downtrodden that he has no name, only a number. The writing shows beauty in the depiction of people of great courage, character and creativity in the midst of impossible circumstances. – JKS

SHORT LIST

Banker, Ashok, Prince of Ayodhya (Penguin India) The is an Indian epic of awe-inspiring antiquity and complexity. Every thousand years or so someone updates it for contemporary readers. Banker's Ramayana, a five volume series, is a perfect fit with our era's high fantasy genre. Powerful, emotional, fast-moving, many-layered, a cultural trip, a roller-coaster ride. – JKS

Buckell, Tobias, Toy Planes (Nature, Oct. 13, 2005) This story is told with an economy of words and yet manages to give the reader a strong impression of island life and the compromises made by many minority people, to maintain both personal and cultural identity in the larger world outside their own communities. the story also speaks to the economic survival of poorer countries in a world dominated by rich corporations and large nations. – CA

Butler, Octavia E., Fledgling (Seven Stories Press). Octavia Butler’s final novel is a meditation on social and sexual vampirism, viewed through the lens of a 53 year old “juvenile” blood-sucker named Shori. Mature, frightening, and thought-provoking, FLEDGLING simply isn’t like any other vampire story ever written, and a fitting cap to a spectacular—if tragically truncated—career. – SB

Chaponda, Daliso, Trees of Bone (Apex Science Fiction and Horror Digest, Issue #3) Spares no one in a rock-plus-hard-place account of hatred, history, cultural transmission, and the price of peace. Set in an African landscape between country and town, past and present, old ways and new ways, this story grants dignity and yet tragedy to an elderly healer and his young apprentice in a time of social turmoil. – JKS

Douglas, Marcia, Marie-Ma. (Femspec, Vol. 6, Issue #1). A chorus of voices imbues this spare but beautifully written story, casting a harmonic note to the narrative about a rather strange neighbor, a family's preconceptions, and a little girl's curiosity. Each uniquely drawn character, different ages from a young daughter to her mother to the odd and exquisite Marie-Ma herself, gives life to the observation and eventual interaction with an unexplainable magic that surrounds each of them in different and unexpected ways. – KL

Goto, Hiromi, Nostalgia. (Nature, Sept. 1, 2005) A very short dense take on futuristic biology and the culture thereby associated and all about the Brontës. – MJH

Jemisin, N.K., Cloud Dragon Skies (Strange Horizons, Aug. 1, 2005) A poetic portrayal from the point of view of Nahautu. Her pristine world with her family is benignly invaded by scientists whose decision to intervene with the cloud dragons of her world wreak unexpected consequences -- especially for her as the daughter of the one man whose opposition to the help goes unheeded. Jemison's deft handling of the protagonist's voice and her inner conflicts perfectly filter the larger issues of technology vs. natural order, and the consequences of humanity's choices in this battle. Though dealing with broader concepts, the story never loses sight of the personal struggle and ramifications on an individual level, and provides a beautifully wrought conclusion to the dilemma with a melancholic weight that truly gives life to this unique character. – KL

Jennings, A.H., Owasa. (Farthing, July, 2005) A suspenseful tale that keeps you guessing about the ramifications and meaning of the characters' actions until the very end, and the ending itself provides an iron anchor to the rest of the narrative. The language is beautiful throughout, while in parts is contrasted sharply by a frank, almost blunt voice. Gods and humanity are tackled in this story, and the conflict is very much worthwhile. – KL

Johnson, Alaya Dawn, Shard of Glass. (Strange Horizons, Feb. 14, 2005) This well-written story intensely illustrates a political struggle turned personal for a black woman who flees her white lover across the world, taking their child and a magical shard of glass. – JS

Khan, Ahmed, The Meaning of Life and Other Cliches (Another Realm, March, 2005) A dialogue between two stranded spacers coping with memories, watching maybe sentient will-o-the-wisps, telling a whole story sparsely. Lovely writing, close to poetry. – MJH

Nyoka, Gail, Mella and the N'anga: An African Tale. (Sumach Press) A perfect young adult novel, a well-crafted story of a princess on a quest to save her father's kingdom. In the process, the story of her encounter with the N'anga becomes a fierce tale of female empowerment, wrapped in sweet, simple prose. – MJH

Okorafor-Mbachu, Nnedimma, Zahrah the Windseeker. (Houghton Mifflin) Zarah is a girl of unique appearance and special abilities that set her apart from friends and family, and this difference troubles her. When her best friend becomes ill after an exploring trip to the forbidden jungle goes awry, she is determined to return to the jungle to bring back a cure for her dying friend. along the way she has many adventures, and meets many interesting friends. This delightful story is the kind of book I wish had been around when I was about ten or eleven. I am very glad it is here to share with my granddaughter. – CA

Shawl, Nisi, Wallamelon (Aeon Magazine, Issue #3) This is a tale in which magic and the traditions of Voudun play an important part in a young girl's becoming an adult. the story also explores the challenge of how to maintain the worship of ancient gods, and a childhood wonder for magic and nature, in a world beset by poverty and urban violence." – CA (NOTE: Since Shawl is currently active on the board of the Carl Brandon Society, her work cannot receive a CBS award. But the jury felt that "Wallamelon" merited being on the Recommended Reading list.)

Singh, Vandana, The Tetrahedron. (Intranova, March 15, 2005) When a large mysterious object suddenly appears in the middle of a street in New Delhi, India, all the world's scientists flock to study the occurrence. The implacable tetrahedron gives little answers, though, save for young university student Maya, who finds herself drawn to the strange shape and questioning her own assumptions about duty, choice, and what it means to be the mystery in one's own life. A sensitive and smart portrayal of the doubts and desires of one modern woman conflicted between the assumptions of the past and the possibilities of the future. Family life in current-day India is engagingly portrayed through the point of view of an intelligent and compassionate protagonist, giving a glimpse into this unique culture (sometimes with a gentle humor) while successfully weaving speculative elements to highlight Maya's personal struggle. – KL


KINDRED AWARD FINALISTS * KINDRED AWARD FINALISTS

WINNER

Stormwitch, by Susan Vaught (Bloomsbury USA Children's Books) A fine work about a young black woman's journey from the egalitarian Caribbean to the segregated American South. Along the way, she learns about the reasons to "keep her head down" and steps into her own power as a magician and as a woman. Written as a young adult novel, it works for adults as well. – IKH

SHORT LIST

Buckell, Tobias, Toy Planes (Nature, Oct. 13, 2005). One-page stories with so much substance are very rare. This is beautifully done. – UKL

Butler, Octavia E., Fledgling (Seven Stories Press). It is impossible to comment on this book without taking at least a moment to mourn the loss of one of the deftest, most perceptive, and most complex science fiction and fantasy writers of all time. Her voice will be missed forever.

One of the most direct treatments of racism I've ever seen in a book, and Butler uses the fact that it is science fiction to make the metaphors and parallels all the more clear and to put her message across. The battle is between those with racist attitudes and the forward-thinkers, and the forward-thinkers win. … Butler has taken the traditional Eastern European vampire myth and turned it into a modern science fiction thriller that also stands as an examination of racism and the evils of "racial purity." The writing style is spare and clean, with tight prose which borders on Hemingway-esque. She reveals the answers to the mystery skillfully and the characterizations are realistic and humanistic. -- CT

Chaponda, Daliso, Trees of Bone (Apex Science Fiction and Horror Digest, #3). A very moving allegory about post-traumatic stress disorder brought on by racism which was set in Africa. It also has some interesting things to say about living with one's oppressors and living with oneself. -- IKH

Gilks, Marg, Before the Altar on The Feast of All Souls (Tesseracts 9). My favorite short story of all we read. Done with a wonderfully light hand. Most of the people in this story are dead, which is what is so neat about it. – UKL

Mosley, Walter, 47 (Little, Brown). Whenever a slave narrative is moving, evocative, and thoughtful without being sentimental or simplistic, it’s worth honoring. 47 is a fine example. -- DLN


Okorafor-Mbachu, Nnedimma, Zahrah the Windseeker (Houghton Mifflin). Generally hailed by the jury as one of the most entertaining books we read; a young-adult novel with a great deal to recommend to all ages. The author has a special skill at conveying a full sensory experience: and her characters have some remarkable sensory experiences! -- DLN

Williams, Liz, La Gran Muerte (Asimov’s Science Fiction April 2005) Beautifully and painfully written, and flows with wonderful ideas and images. -- JG

Sunday, May 14, 2006


The Carl Brandon Society needs your help!

Over the past year, the Carl Brandon Society (fostering diversity and the visibility of people of color in science fiction, fantasy, and related genres) has been working with a diverse group of very wonderful people to move from being an informal annual gathering of readers and writers of color at Wiscon to becoming a visible presence for people of color in science fiction, fantasy, and related genres. We have succeeded - but we still need your help.

The Carl Brandon Society Parallax and Kindred awards have been moving forward since last WisCon. The Kindred Award is for the best work published in the past year dealing with issues of race and ethnicity, while the Parallax Award is for best work published in the past year by a self-identified writer of color. And after the recent death of Octavia E. Butler, we wanted to do something to honor her legacy. This has taken the form of an endowed scholarship fund, which will help support writers of color attending Clarion or Clarion West writers’ workshops. And there's the annual bibliography and reading guide to writers of color working in speculative fiction and related fields, the new Carl Brandon blog, website updates, and then there's more, past that.

The long and the short of it is that we're dancing as fast as we can, but in order to meet this challenge, we need an infusion of money right now. Nothing major, and we're moving towards getting it all in place, but like every non-profit organization, we need to raise funds to make the difference in our work. Our goal right now is to raise $3000 by Wiscon, over Memorial Day weekend in Madison, Wisconsin. To do that, we need your help.

If you have the opportunity, and want to support diversity and the visibility of readers and writers of color in science fiction, fantasy, and related genres, please consider making a contribution. Visit us today at: The Carl Brandon Society and make a donation. Your help now will make it possible for us to continue our work now and into a better future.

NOTE: if you're interested in participating in the ongoing work of the CBS, anyone can become a paid member.

Thank you!

For The Carl Brandon Society:
Candra K. Gill
Ian Hageman
MJ Hardman
Nalo Hopkinson
Victor Raymond
Nisi Shawl
Diantha Sprouse

Sheree Renée Thomas: Wiscon 30 or Bust!

if you don't never go to but ONE science fiction conference in your big, beautiful life, then let it be, let it be WISCON 30, because this year is going to be amazing.


Sheree Renée Thomas is the editor of DARK MATTER: READING THE BONES, winner of the 2005 World Fantasy Award and the New York Times Notable Book of the Year landmark volume, DARK MATTER: A Century of Speculative Fiction from the African Diaspora, winner of the 2001 World Fantasy Award and the Gold Pen Award.

Critique of films "Pocahontas" and "The Indian in the Cupboard"


Big white boy, little Native American



The Incredible Shrinking...
and Expanding Ethnic Minority
or The Racist in the Cupboard


Unwilling body alterations give these "instant kiddie classics" disturbing undertones



By Gary Morris, in Bright Lights Film Journal

While the exact details are sketchy, historians agree that Pocahontas was probably 10 or 12 years old, not the twentysomething sex bomb of the film.

Future Imperfect: sci-fi's nationalist narratives

BY GARY MORRIS, in Bright Lights Film Journal

excerpt:

The physical growth of America depended on the expropriation of land and the colonization of its owners, a process mythologized in stories of the Old West with its self-sacrificing settlers, brave pioneers, and romantic gunslingers. The enemies were Native Americans and Mexicans who resisted the white outsiders who came armed with both weapons and a self-derived moral/religious sanction. American appropriation of European science fiction followed a similar, if less bloody, pattern...

SPACE BUNNY: The sexy, fabulist, hybrid world of Cecilia Tan

Photo by Seshu Badrinath



article by Claire Light in Hyphen: Asian America Unabridged

excerpt:

Telepathic lovers attend a bondage play party at a gothic mansion. The scion of space colonists dives for orgasm pearls which give her history lessons. A spaceport convict receives training in sexual submission. These and other fictograms are brought to you by the fantastic and freaky imagination of Cecilia Tan, an embodiment and observer of intersections. Her current favorite is between science fiction and bondage/domination erotica, two great tastes that taste so great together that she founded Circlet Press to publish such confections. Just over a decade old, Circlet Press has established a small but permanent niche in the ever widening, and ever more reputable, publishing field of erotica.

Under strange stars: Black writers and fans explore race through science fiction. (Culture).

Saturday, May 13, 2006

Asian American Writers' Workshop presents Fiction/Nonfiction: A Group Workshop for Prose Writers with Alexander Chee

Saturday, June 24, 11am ­ 6pm

Fiction/Nonfiction: A Group Workshop for Prose Writers with Alexander Chee

An intensive day long workshop devoted to refining your work-in-progress. Discussions will focus on redrafting, jump-starting and troubleshooting, discussion about elements of prose, group critiques and personal advice from instructor. An engaging, supportive environment for serious published or unpublished writers who want critical feedback and suggestions on their fiction.

Participants must submit over email up to 20 pages of chapters/short stories/prose excerpts by Friday June 2nd. The instructor and fellow participants will receive copies of your work in advance for thoughtful criticism. Your email submission will be acknowledged. Class filled on rolling basis.

$125 general, $100 members. Please call 212.494.0061 to register. Limited to 12 students.

@ the Workshop
16 West 32nd, 10th Floor
New York City

Alexander Chee's first novel, Edinburgh (Picador), won the Asian American Literary Award, the Michener and the Lambda. He is a recent the recipient of a Whiting Writers Award and a fellowship from the NEA in fiction. His essays and stories are anthologized in The M Word, TakeOut, Loss Within Loss, and Boys Like Us, among others, and he has taught writing at Wesleyan University, the New School and Goddard College. He begins as Amherst College's Visiting Writer in the fall of this year. His new novel, The Queen of the Night, is forthcoming from Houghton Mifflin in 2007.

Transcript of panel discussion: How to Get the Best Agent

The Million Dollar Book Contract: How to Get (the BEST) Agent

On April 25, 2006, The Asian American Writers' Workshop presented a panel discussion featuring four top literary agents sharing their expertise on how to land a book contract.

Panelists:

Sloan Harris has worked in the book department of International Creative Management for 16 years, specializing in narrative nonfiction and literary fiction. Clients include Jeffrey Goldberg, Hampton Sides, Doug Stanton, Susan Casey, George Pelecanos, James McManus, Anthony Lane, and Anthony Swofford, among others.

Dorian Karchmar is a literary agent at the William Morris Agency where she specializes in literary fiction and creative nonfiction. Clients include Jennifer Haigh, Eric Puchner, Dr. Sharon Moalem and Scott Heim.

Ayesha Pande launched Lyons & Pande International last fall with her partner Jennifer Lyons, and was previously an editor at Crown Publishers, HarperResource and Farrar, Straus & Giroux. Clients include Malaysian writer Preeta Samarasan as well Pakistani American writer Sheba Karim.

Ira Silverberg is a literary agent at Donadio & Olson. Prior to that, he worked in publishing in various capacities at Grove Weidenfeld, High Risk Books/Serpent's Tail and Grove Press. Clients include Christopher Sorrentino, Rene Steinke, Kate Spade, Lawrence Chua, R. Zamora Linmark.

Quang Bao, Moderator, is the Executive Director of The Asian American Writers' Workshop.

Click here to read the transcript of the panel

Asian American Writers' Workshop Youth Writing and Performance Project, NYC, summer 2006

Summer 2006
Where I'm Calling From: A Youth Writing and Performance Project


The Asian American Writers' Workshop is offering a new writing project for youth that focuses on capturing personal experiences in the form of creative non-fiction, stories based on real life, essays and journals. We will write of our own personal histories and stories as well as our thoughts on the world as it is. We want to hear what you struggle with, what you have accomplished, and what you deal with as youth. "Where I'm Calling From" is a way for you to pinpoint your location in life and the geography of your situation.

We will meet for ten classes in late June and early July. We will create and discuss our writing and explore different forms and elements of creative non-fiction. A closing event will feature live readings and performances, which will be recorded and broadcast through the Workshop's website.

WICF is open to youth, grades 9 ­ 12, from all racial backgrounds in New York City and surrounding areas. All youth who participate in WICF will receive an artist stipend of $200, based on commitment, attendance and participation.

WICF takes place at The Asian American Writers' Workshop on West 32nd Street in Manhattan, between 5th Avenue and Broadway, one block from the Empire State Building. Founded in 1991, The Asian American Writers' Workshop is the country's largest literary arts nonprofit dedicated to the creation, development, publication and dissemination of Asian American literature.

The sessions will take place on:

Monday - Friday, June 26 - 30, 1 pm - 5 pm each day Wednesday - Friday, July 5 - 7, 1 pm - 5 pm each day Monday - Tuesday, July 10 - 11, 1 pm - 5 pm each day Closing Event, Wednesday, July 12 at 7 pm

The project is co-directed by Edward Garcia and Bushra Rehman.

Project Co-director, Edward Garcia is a Latino spoken word poet and performer from New York City, who has taught nationally for many different organizations.

Project Co-director, Bushra Rehman is a poet, performer and writer of creative non-fiction. She is co-editor of Colonize This! Young Women of Color on Today's Feminism. She performs and teaches nationally.

To apply, please mail, fax or e-mail application no later than Monday June 5, 2006. All applications must be received by this date. Applications accepted and admitted on a rolling basis. We will notify all applicants by mid-June.

Download the WICF application (2 pages, MS Word format.)


Please note the Playwriting Workshop with David Henry Hwang is postponed until further notice.

Monday, May 01, 2006

Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis Trilogy: A Biologist's Response

A talk on Octavia Butler's work, given by biologist and science fiction writer Joan Slonczewski at the 2000 conference of the Science Fiction Research Association.

"Unlike the vast majority of alien abduction tales, Dawn actually presents a biologically plausible explanation for why the Oankali need to interbreed with humans."