Bending Genre, Bending Gender - Tor/Forge Blog
Close
bluemagic 99A

Bending Genre, Bending Gender

Bending Genre, Bending Gender

Blue Magic by A. M. Dellamonica

Written by A. M. Dellamonica

Sometimes speculative fiction can tell you who you are.

In 1996, Circlet Press and editor Cecilia Tan brought out Genderflex: Sexy Stories on the Edge and In Between, an anthology whose stories were specifically geared to exploring the gender fluidity, of breaking down the one-two binary of male *or* female, of exploring the other, the both, the in-between. Before reading the book, I’m not sure I ever would have said there was anything about my gender that was all that complicated. Afterward, I realized that in some of those stories were picture-perfect versions of myself.

It wasn’t lifeshattering. The look in the mirror that is fiction didn’t even change much for me at the time. That part of my life was remarkably in balance, even if I was somewhat clueless about it. Even so, Genderflex kicked me into a gentle forward motion. It was an early step on the journey that led to me identifying, today, as bigendered.

It’s easy to decry the lack of queer and genderqueer characters in SF. We all want that chance to see ourselves in stories, and there can never be enough of those moments. But, honestly, I think science fiction and fantasy do a better job than many genres of exploring the male-female binary and alternatives to it. I can recall a James Patrick Kelly story, “Lovestory,” with aliens whose sexes were divided into male, nursing parent, and the ones who bore the kids. Recently in her novel Undertow, Elizabeth Bear created a race of amphibians with no gender at all.

But aliens put us at light-years distance from the day to day experience of genderqueer folk (while literary fiction, in my experience, often shoves it all too directly in your face.) I’m not sure there are a lot of ordinary but transgendered humans in SF, and this is something I tackled head-on in Blue Magic.

In the world I created in Blue Magic’s predecessor, Indigo Springs, one of the characters has proclaimed an Age of Miracles. Another—a middle aged guy who’s lived his entire life in denial about being in a woman’s body—gets a miraculous opportunity, late in the book, to change his sex. Immediately, in an instant, he’s the man he’s always—and never—been.

Gender transition in the here and now is a complex process with a lot of involvement from the medical system: you usually need a psychological diagnosis, for one thing, and this allows you access to hormone prescriptions and one or more surgeries. There are a lot of hoops to be jumped and hazards and obstacles aplenty… and all that only comes if you live in a part of the world where the mere suggestion that your gender and your body might not be in alignment won’t get you ostracized or killed.

In Blue Magic, with Ev Lethewood, I wanted to take doctors and psychiatrists out of the equation, and deal with gender transition as if it were as simple as throwing a switch, buying new clothes, and asking yourself: now that I’m really me, what do I do?

If this storyline can do for even one person what Genderflex did for me, I’d be thrilled beyond words.

…………………………

From the Tor/Forge May newsletter. Sign up to receive our newsletter via email.

…………………………

More from our May newsletter: