SF-TH Inc Post-Apocalyptic Hoping: Octavia Butler's Dystopian/Utopian Vision Author(s): Jim Miller Source: Science Fiction Studies, Vol. 25, No. 2 (Jul., 1998), pp. 336-360 Published by: SF-TH Inc Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4240705 Accessed: 29-06-2016 17:31 UTC Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at http://about.jstor.org/terms JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. SF-TH Inc is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Science Fiction Studies This content downloaded from 128.138.65.57 on Wed, 29 Jun 2016 17:31:12 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms 336 SCIENCE-FICTION STUDIES, VOLUME 25 (1998) Jim Miller Post-Apocalyptic Hoping: Octavia Butler's Dystopian/Utopian Vision "The world is full of painful stories. Sometimes it seems as though there aren't any other kind and yet I found myself thinking how beautiful that glint of water was through the trees. "-Octavia Butler, Parable of the Sower, ?21:235-36. 1. Critical Dystopias/Utopian Pessimism. If Don DeLillo's dystopian vision is a kind of Baudrillardian negation and Harold Jaffe's work goes a bit further by seeking to work through the dystopian via "guerrilla" strategies, Octavia Butler goes further still by working through the dystopian elements of the culture as Jaffe does and then seeking to create new myths for the postmodern age. Butler does not offer a full-blown utopian "blueprint" in her work, but rather a post-apocalyptic hoping informed by the lessons of the past. In both the XENOGENESIS trilogy-Dawn (1987), Adulthood Rites (1988), and Imago (1989)-and Parable of the Sower (1994), Butler stares into the abyss of the dystopian future and reinvents the desire for a better world. In doing so, she places herself firmly within a rich tradition of feminist utopian writing. In their introduction to Utopian and Science Fiction by Women: Worlds of Difference, Jane L. Donawerth and Carol A. Kolmerten argue that "utopias and science fiction by women-women's 'literatures of estrangement'-consti- tute a continuous literary tradition in the West from the seventeenth century until the present day" (1). American women's writing is a particularly fertile site for utopian imaginings. As Jean Pfaelzer claims in "Subjectivity as Femi- nist Utopia," "early feminists" in 19th-century America, like Rebecca Harding Davis, wrote critiques of male utopias that "demystify the Western notion of the self, albeit the utopian self, as separate, bounded, and autonomous. The feminist notion of utopia projects a dialectical relationship between the individ- ual and society" (95). In "Texts and Contexts: American Women Envision Utopia, 1890-1920," Kolmerten notes that "from 1890 to 1919, more than thirty American women wrote utopian novels depicting their versions of a better world" when "the mere act of publishing a novel-especially a 'utopian' novel that criticized aspects of the culture in which they lived-was a subver- sive act" (107). Donawerth, in "Science Fiction by Women in the Early Pulps, 1926-1930," tells us that "the feminist utopia continued in the pulps even though it virtually disappeared in the hardback book trade from the 1920s through the 1950s," making utopian transformations of "domestic spaces and duties through technology" and revising gender roles (137). By the 1960s and 1970s, a flood of new feminist utopias appeared from writers like Joanna Russ, Marge Piercy, Ursula K. Le Guin, and others that corresponded to the second wave of the American feminist movement. Studies like Sarah Lefanu's This content downloaded from 128.138.65.57 on Wed, 29 Jun 2016 17:31:12 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms OCTAVIA BUTLER'S VISION 337 Feminism and Science Fiction document and discuss second-wave feminist utopias, while critics like Marleen Barr (in Feminist Fabulation: Space/Post- modem Fiction and Lost in Space: Probing Feminist Science Fiction and Be- yond) and Jenny Wolmark (in Aliens and Others) deal with the feminist utopias of the 60s and 70s, as well as postmodern and dystopian writing of the 80s and 90s that is the post-utopian continuation of the feminist utopian tradition. What is historically unique about the kind of feminist utopian/dystopian fiction being written today is that it occupies what Jenny Wolmark refers to as an "intersection" where feminism, science fiction, utopian and dystopian think- ing, and postmodernism all come together (3). Thus, contemporary utopian/ dystopian postmodern science-fiction narratives are profoundly "intertextual" in that their striking hybridity defies easy genre categorization and makes them effective tools with which to "undermine ostensibly clear-cut distinctions between self and other" and "explore possibilities for alternative and non- hierarchical definitions of gender and identity within which the difference of aliens and others can be accommodated rather than repressed" (2). Wolmark does not cite Darko Suvin, but she clearly sees contemporary feminist utopian/ dystopian writing as performing a function similar to Suvin's "cognitive es- trangement" in that it undermines "ostensibly clear-cut distinctions" by helping us see the world in a new way. In Lost in Space, Marleen Barr also notes the hybridity of many contem- porary feminist narratives and coins the term "feminist fabulation" as "an umbrella term that includes science fiction, fantasy, utopian literature, and mainstream literature" that is "engaged in the postmodern critique of patri- archal master narratives" (12). She cites Darko Suvin's term "cognitive es- trangement" (4) and claims that this is what feminist fabulation undertakes as it "offers us a world clearly and radically discontinuous from the patriarchal one we know, yet returns to confront that known patriarchal world in some cognitive way" (11). I would argue that what Barr calls "feminist fabulation" is part of a larger literature of estrangement, and that the use of estrangement as a literary tactic is fundamentally utopian in that estrangement or defamiliar- ization is rooted in an attempt to push us toward the New, or what Ernst Bloch would call the Not Yet Conscious. Thus, any form of literature that seeks to help us see things anew is driven by a utopian impulse-even if the work in question is dystopian. Octavia Butler's work is interesting in that it exists within the tradition of feminist utopian writing and, at the same time, seeks to contest it. As an Afri- can-American woman writing within a largely white women's tradition, her work often questions the assumptions shared by many white feminist utopian writers. Butler is also far more class-conscious than many other utopian femi- nist science-fiction writers. Thus, her largely dystopian fictions challenge not only patriarchal myths, but also capitalist myths, racist myths, and feminist- utopian myths. Her XENOGENESIS trilogy and Parable of the Sower are critical dystopias motivated out of a utopian pessimism in that they force us to confront the dystopian elements of postmodern culture so that we can work through them and begin again. This content downloaded from 128.138.65.57 on Wed, 29 Jun 2016 17:31:12 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms 338 SCIENCE-FICTION STUDIES, VOLUME 25 (1998) 2. A Theorist For Cyborgs. In "A Cyborg Manifesto," Donna Haraway discusses the need for socialist-feminism to reconstruct a politics that deals with the "systems of myth and meanings structuring our imaginations" (163). More specifically, she is calling for a new "ironic political myth" (149) that includes "the utopian dream of the hope for a monstrous world without gen- der" (181), as well as other utopian aspirations for a world without racism and class domination. The new myths must be ironic because "irony is about con- tradictions" (149), and Haraway does not want to resolve our differences into a bland, oppressive sameness. Irony is also important as a strategy because it is about "humor and serious play" (149), qualities which Haraway implies have been lacking in socialist-feminist politics. In the same essay, Haraway cites Octavia Butler as one of the writers whom she sees as "theorists for cyborgs" (173), those who are working to imagine a more just, non-totalizing (not indebted to the ghost of Stalin) alternative to late capitalism. The cyborg is a "hybrid" (149), a figure which breaks down the "boundaries" between "human and animal" (151), "organism and machine" (152), "physical and non-physical" (153), and self and other with regard to "gender, race, or class" (155). A cyborg is a construct of "transgressed boundaries," comfortable with "permanently partial identities and contradictory standpoints" (154). Hara- way's figure of the cyborg is related to Gloria Anzaldiia's notion of "mestiza consciousness," a utopian dream of identity formed at the "focal point" where "the possibility of uniting all that is separate occurs," when "She learns to transform the small 'I' into the total Self" (Anzalduia 379, 382). This transfor- mation is not achieved by smoothing over differences, but by developing a "tolerance for ambiguity" and for crossing "borders" (Anzalduia 378). In "Reading Buchi Emecheta," Haraway claims that Butler's "post-holo- caust reinvented 'families"' serve "as tropes to guide us through the ravages of gender, class, imperialism, racism, and nuclear exterminist global culture" (121). Thus, rather than dismissing Butler's science fiction as a "low" genre or a form of escapist fantasy, we can more usefully read it as a site of extreme- ly important political activity. Fiction, according to Haraway, is a tool that can "reverse and displace the hierarchical dualisms of naturalized identities" and "subvert the central myths of origin of Western culture" with their "longing for fulfillment in apocalypse" (175). Thus, according to Haraway in Primate Visions, Butler's fictions are "salvation history," an imaginative site of experimentation where new notions of identity and community are under construction. One might think of the process of reading Butler's books as a journey of exploration where the reader is able to try on new narratives about the future and consider various alternatives. Science fiction like Butler's, according to Haraway, uses conventions that "require readers radically to rewrite stories in the act of reading them.. .to find an 'elsewhere' from which to envision a different and less hostile order and relationships among people, animals, technologies, and land" (15). For Haraway, Butler's "salvation his- tory is not utopian," however, for utopian stories are about "reproduction of the One.. .rooted in fantasies of natural roots and recoverable origins" and "the sacred image of the same" (379-80).' This content downloaded from 128.138.65.57 on Wed, 29 Jun 2016 17:31:12 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms OCTAVIA BUTLER'S VISION 339 Butler herself has also taken issue with the notion that utopian thinking is a desirable enterprise. In a 1990 interview with Larry McCaffery and Jim McMenamin, she stated: I find utopias ridiculous. We're not going to have a perfect society until we get a few perfect humans, and that seems unlikely. Besides, any true utopia would almost certainly be incredibly boring, and it would probably be so overspecialized that any change we might introduce would probably destroy the whole system. As bad as we humans are sometimes, I have a feeling that we'll never have that problem with the current system. (69) But perhaps it all depends on how one defines the utopian impulse. In "There Goes the Neighborhood: Octavia Butler's Demand for Diversity in Utopias," Michelle Erica Green refers to Butler's ambivalence toward utopian thinking, but claims that "a utopia does not have to be a 'perfect' society" (169). She notes that utopia "is a Greek pun that can be read as 'nowhere' (utopia) or 'good place' (eutopia)" (169). Thus, Green argues that "literary utopias engage the paradox between these two meanings, straddling issues of locality, textual- ity, and ideology in an attempt to bridge the gap between fictional discourse and everyday life" (169). If this is the case, then utopian fiction has more to do with social/cultural/economic critique than with imagining perfection. Uto- pian thinking forces us to engage the discrepancy between what is and what could be. It seeks to inspire us to desire, 'a la Bloch, but not necessarily for a predetermined solution. The impulse to imagine a better world does not necessarily lead, as Hara- way's comments imply, to the creation of ideal societies whose central charac- teristic is a bland sameness. Indeed, the utopian impulse may even lead us through a dystopian nightmare. As Green notes, Butler's works border on the dystopian because she insists on confronting problems that have occurred so often in human communities that they seem almost an unavoidable part of human nature, such as greed, prejudices based on appearances, oppression of women, and might-makes-right ideologies. Rather than create utopias in which these problems have simply ceased to exist, Butler demonstrates time and time again in her fiction that they must be worked through-even if that process involves the use of dangerous human tendencies like violence. (170) Hence, as Green suggests here, the utopian element in Butler's work is inter- twined with dystopian thought. Utopia is the unseen horizon that makes dysto- pian visions possible. Butler's critical dystopias force us to "work through" the dystopian before we can begin the effort to imagine a better world. In Butler's XENOGENESIS trilogy, we are thrust into a post-apocalyptic world from the start and forced to make our way through it. 3. XENOGENESIS. In her XENOGENESIS trilogy, Butler tells the story of how the remains of humanity and a ruined earth are "saved" by an alien encounter after humanity has nearly destroyed itself in a nuclear war. These novels mix the typical science-fiction "space alien" story with elements of the slave narra- tive, the Genesis story, the nature/culture debate, utopian/dystopian tales, captivity narratives, and more. Butler's aliens are both colonizers and a utopian This content downloaded from 128.138.65.57 on Wed, 29 Jun 2016 17:31:12 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms 340 SCIENCE-FICTION STUDIES, VOLUME 25 (1998) collective, while the captured/saved humans are both admirable survivors and ugly xenophobes. Lilith Iyapo, the main character in Dawn, is both the mother of a new race and a Judas to humanity. In the process of reading the trilogy, we confront and negotiate these contradictions, as Butler prods us to move beyond old dilemmas and imagine a different future. In Dawn, the Oankali, a gene-trading, colonizing alien species, simulta- neously saves the earth from the aftermath of nuclear devastation and plots its utter transformation into an alien-human hybrid species. The Oankali are not human-like aliens such as we might see on Star Trek; their bodies are covered with " tentacles " (? 1. 2:12) and their " literal unearthliness " (? 1. 2: 1 1) inspires "a true xenophobia" in Lilith and the other humans whom they first awake from the suspended animation in which the Oankali have been keeping them. In addition to their extreme "difference" in appearance, the Oankali are also a radically "other" culture, a totally harmonious social collective that has mastered genetic engineering, healing, and a completely organic form of tech- nology that effaces the line between machine and organism. Thus, their "ship" and everything in it is a living entity, a being engaged in some form of "trade" with the Oankali. As one of them tells Lilith: "We serve the ship's needs and it serves ours. It would die without us and we would be planetbound without it. For us, that would eventually mean death" (?1.5:33). The Oankali's com- munal, totally reciprocal relationship with each other and with other beings leads them to conclude that humnans are both fascinating and genetically flawed because they are both "intelligent" and "hierarchical." When human intelli- gence "serves" hierarchy instead of recognizing it as a "problem," it is "like ignoring cancer" (?1.5:37). Hence, the Oankali plan to save humanity by healing and subsuming it, merging humans with themselves. What the Oankali see as a solution, however, many of the humans they awake see as a threat to their individual autonomy at best, and as genocide at worst. The Oankali choose Lilith, an African American whom they physically alter so that she is stronger and can interact with the ship, to awaken the first human colony from their induced sleep-stasis in order to repopulate the earth and mate with the Oankali. Lilith's name, as Cathy Peppers reminds us, is the same as "Adam's first wife" who was cast out of the Garden of Eden for refusing to lie with him and whose fate "was to couple with 'demons' and give birth to a monstrous brood of children" (?2.2:49). This parallel is an interesting one as the Lilith in XENOGENESIS is labeled a "Judas goat" (?2.4:65), not for refusing to lie with the aliens, but rather for mating with them. Her act is both a betrayal of humanity and a "genesis" for a new species. Lilith serves as a frequently unwilling intermediary between the Oankali and their human captives, whose forced stay aboard the ship reminds Donna Haraway of "the middle passage" of slaves on their way to America (Primate Visions 378). Thus, the Oankali are both healing saviors and masters of the humans with whom they seek to join. They are both generous and condescending, admiring and dismissive, of the compelling and destructive beings called humans. In the process of waking and training the captive humans, Lilith meets and falls in love with Joseph, a Chinese-American man who is eventually killed by This content downloaded from 128.138.65.57 on Wed, 29 Jun 2016 17:31:12 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms OCTAVIA BUTLER'S VISION 341 other humans for siding with Lilith, but not before the Oankali are able to store enough of him to later impregnate Lilith with her/their first son. Cross- breeding itself is a complicated process involving five beings: a male and a female human, a male and a female Oankali, and an ooloi (who are the neuter Oankali responsible both for healing and for genetically engineering the new species "constructs"). This new sexual act gives humans a never-before-experi- enced total pleasure that involves both body and mind, but this pleasure comes at the cost of the loss of human intimacy-the ooloi literally lies between the man and woman and shares the results of this union with the Oankali pair. Early on, this transgression of human sexual and gender boundaries and the resulting new hybrid "constructs" it brings horrifies and disgusts most of the humans. Hence, the "resisters" are born along with the recolonization of the earth, despite the Oankali's best efforts. Even Lilith, whom the Oankali think they have won over, is secretly in sympathy with the rebels. Adulthood Rites takes place several years after Damm ends, and it deals with the efforts of Lilith's construct son, Akin, who is half-human and half-Oankali, to agitate on behalf of the resisters who refuse to join with the aliens. As a baby, Akin is kidnapped by a roving band of male resisters (male humans, it seems, are more prone to violence and other forms of domination than women) and sold to Gabriel and Tate, former friends of Lilith's and residents of the Phoenix Colony. Because they would not mate with the Oankali, resister humans have been sterilized. Still, they build a village that closely resembles a North American small-town community, except that there are no children, and, as time passes, people become more desperate, competitive, and violent. Brutal bands of roving human males raid the Phoenix Colony and other villages to abduct and rape women, or to trade kidnapped children for women. It seems that humans are intent on living down to the Oankalis' vision of them as "dangerous," fatally flawed beings prone to destructive behavior in the service of hierarchy (?1.5:30). Akin is kidnapped because he looks human, even though later, when he reaches "metamorphosis," he changes into a human-Oankali hybrid complete with tentacles. Tate and Gabriel protect Akin from other villagers, some of whom would cut his tentacles off to make him look human again. Despite the violence and stupidity Akin sees, his time with the resisters shows him that not all humans are fatally flawed, and he becomes convinced that it is wrong to force them to either join with the Oankali or become extinct. Instead of hating his captors, Akin "made them all his teachers" (?2.2:162). Thus, the human- Oankali construct does not share his alien parents' paternalistic attitudes and disdain for individual autonomy. Once he is rescued, returns to the human- Oankali colony Lo, and reaches adulthood, Akin becomes an advocate for the resisters. He argues the humans' case with the Oankali and is allowed to help the resisters establish a human-only colony on Mars. Finally, in Imnago, Butler deals with issues of profound difference through the character of Jodahs, Lilith's last child, who turns out to be a half-human and half-Oankali ooloi. The result of this new mixture is a hybrid being that is neither female nor male. Rather than embodying a set gender, Jodahs is a This content downloaded from 128.138.65.57 on Wed, 29 Jun 2016 17:31:12 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms 342 SCIENCE-FICTION STUDIES, VOLUME 25 (1998) shape-shifter who can take on the appearance of whichever gender s/he prefers (?2.4:89-90). Like its brother, Akin, Jodahs becomes involved with a colony of humans who survived the nuclear holocaust and remained undiscovered by the Oankali. They have been living an isolated existence, hidden away in a South American mountain range. Hence, these humans are both fertile and deformed from inbreeding (?2.6:105). Jodahs ends up healing and mating with a brother and sister pair from this group, convincing their community to end its isolation, and mediating an arrangement between them and the Oankali. Some of these humans choose to mate with the Oankali, and others choose to go to the Mars Colony, but all of them are given a choice. Thus, by the end of the trilogy, the humans have lost the worst elements of their xenophobia, and the Oankali have come to recognize the importance of individual autono- my. The seeds of a community based on collective cooperation that respects "independent life" have been planted (?3.1:220). Perhaps the harshest critic of the XENOGENESIS trilogy is Hoda M. Zaki who, in "Utopia, Dystopia, and Ideology in the Science Fiction of Octavia Butler," claims that Butler's novels make "unmediated connections between biology and behavior" (242). Thus, according to Zaki, despite the fact that Butler's work introduces racial difference into a mostly white feminist tradition (239) and displays some utopian impulses (243), it is primarily dystopian be- cause "Butler believes that human nature is fundamentally violent," "men are intrinsically more violent than women," and "the human propensity to create the Other can never be transcended" (241). Zaki cites S0ren Baggesen's dis- tinction between utopian and dystopian pessimism and puts Butler in the latter category because her work, like the work of essentialist feminists, leads one to the conclusion that change is impossible by suggesting that the causes of dystopia are to be found in biology rather than history. The problem with Zaki's reading of the XENOGENESIS trilogy is that, in an effort to make theoretical points against essentialism, she confuses Butler's position with that of the biologistic Oankali. While Butler clearly presents the Oankali in a positive light with regard to their non-hierarchical society and their respect for healing, diversity, and guilt-free pleasure, she does not en- dorse their determinist views about humans. Indeed, characters throughout the series voice opposition to the view that the "human contradiction" is unaltera- ble. In Adulthood Rites, Lilith argues that "Human-born men" should not be a problem for the Oankali because "you could teach the next generation to love you, no matter who their mothers are. All you'd have to do is start early. Indoctrinate them before they're old enough to develop other opinions" (?1.2:10). Here Lilith's claim that indoctrination might be a solution to human- male violence and xenophobia would seem to suggest that it was indoctrination, not biology, which created it. Hence, rather than a deterministic monologue, the XENOGENESIS trilogy is a dialogue between opposing views. If one considers the fact that Lilith's children, Akin and Jodahs, go on to fight for and win freedom for the resister-humans, it would seem that, if anything, the trilogy favors the view that social construction is just as important as biology. In "The Future of Female: Octavia Butler's Mother Lode," Dorothy Alli- This content downloaded from 128.138.65.57 on Wed, 29 Jun 2016 17:31:12 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms OCTAVIA BUTLER'S VISION 343 son is critical of Butler not for being a dystopian determinist, but for being "too hopeful" and for resolving the conflict between the Oankali and the hu- mans in a way that is "not very convincing" (476). What is more compelling in Butler's work, for Allison, is the way it illustrates that "The nigger... is the one who's made slave/victim/child. It is the concept of nigger, the need for a victim, and the desire to profit by the abuse or misuse of others that corrupts and destroys" (474). As a result of this, Allison privileges Dawn over the fmal two books because of the way it develops the character of Lilith who, like many of Butler's femnale characters, "submit[s] and bear[s] children rather than die or murder the rapists/masters/aliens" in order to preserve the family (475). Thus, for Allison, Butler's "essential vision" has to do with "the mother mak- ing possible her children's lives and freeing them to choose their own desti- nies" (478), a traditional message of survival rather than transcendence. Allison's claim that Adulthood Rites and Imago are not convincing because "Butler seems to lose interest... even before we do" is probably not just a bad attempt at mind reading, but an indication that Allison has an aversion to utopian thinking, a suspicion that it will attempt to smooth over the racial and gender conflicts she finds that Butler's work addresses so well. But Allison's inclusion of the Oankali in the "masters/rapists/aliens" triad reveals that her reading of them is perhaps a bit too reductionist. Butler does show the Oankali as having colonialist tendencies, but it is too easy to write them off as such without acknowledging the way XENOGENESIS defamiliarizes the victim/victi- mizer paradigm and shows it to be an inadequate way of understanding oppres- sion. There are no "bad guys" in the XENOGENESIS trilogy, only bad ways of thinking. The Oankali, human-males, and others interested in domination are not shown as inherently bad but as ignorant or ideologically deluded. What the "unconvincing" last two books of XENOGENESIS argue is that everyone is re- deemable, even "oppressors"-whether they be violent human-males or coloni- alist aliens. Butler's novels do not suggest that the process of redemption is easy, only that it is possible and necessary for survival. As one of the humans says of accepting union with the alien others: "It's the thing we've been taught against all our lives" (Imago ?2.9:124). Still, it is possible. The fact that Allison finds this idea uncompelling might say more about her own ideological predilections than Butler's skill as a writer. With regard to Allison's claim that Butler valorizes self-sacrificing mother- hood, I agree with Michelle Green who argues that, in Butler's work, "Women make such sacrifices more often than men" not because they are wedded to traditional notions of womanhood but because "They refuse the consequences of not being the ones to take action: the deaths of their children and their future" (182). Furthermore, the family Lilith joins is, by the end of Imago, neither the traditional bourgeois nuclear family nor a master/slave arrangement but, as Green puts it, an extended "'family' that includes not only humans and Oankali, but animals, plants, and sentient spaceships as well" (189). That family is a potentially utopian collectivity. And it is not only women who make "motherly" sacrifices for a better future, as Akin and Jodahs' "selfless" advocacy of the human cause illustrates. Both of them endure bad treatment at This content downloaded from 128.138.65.57 on Wed, 29 Jun 2016 17:31:12 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms 344 SCIENCE-FICTION STUDIES, VOLUME 25 (1998) the hands of humans and are able to forgive them and move beyond recrimina- tion. Thus, perhaps the point Butler is making is that everyone needs to make sacrifices if we all are to survive and transcend the dystopian elements in the culture. Perhaps the conventional "women's" values of healing, teaching, and sharing are worth upholding, in a non-essentialist manner, as tools to help us work through dystopia. One area where Allison does approve of the utopianism in XENOGENESIS is with regard to sex/gender. Allison notes that in the midst of the rape and other forms of sexual domination in the novels, "the Oankali's benign attitude toward sex and sexual variation is vitally important in understanding what Butler sees as the answer to sexual violence-not abstinence or enforced celi- bacy, but a redefinition of sex and a rapprochement between the genders" (477). What Allison likes is the Oankalis' "genuine sense of joy" and their attitude that "Nothing is sinful, nothing is forced. Everything is permitted except violence" (477). As Allison observes, the Oankali "enjoy sex so much" and so "honestly" it appalls the "kidnapped humans" (477). Interestingly, Donna Haraway, who otherwise praises XENOGENESIS as a "salvation history" (Haraway 379), is critical of Butler because "heterosexu- ality remains unquestioned, if more complexly mediated" in the novels (Pri- mate Visions 380). It is my contention that this critique misses the fact that the inter-species sex in XENOGENESIS goes beyond traditional notions of sex and gender. First of all, sex with the ooloi puts the male in a passive position, a fact not missed by Joseph who finds himself struggling against his desire to be "taken" by an ooloi (Dawn ?3.12:190). Secondly, sex with the Oankali in- volves more than two people and gives a kind of pleasure that was previously unimaginable for humans. As one ooloi says to Joseph: "I offer a oneness that your people strive for, dream of, but can't truly attain alone" (Dawn ?3.12: 189). And this undreamed of pleasure is not limited to mere bodily feeling, as Lilith and Joseph discover when they first lie with an ooloi: Now their delight in one another ignited and burned. They moved together sustaining an impossible intensity, both of them tireless, perfectly matched, ablaze in sensation, lost in one another. They seemed to rush upward. A long time later, they seemed to drift down slowly, gradually, savoring a few more moments wholly together. (?3.7:163) This letting go, this loss of selfhood is a kind of polymorphously perverse transcendent moment that is not only beyond the "natural" heterosexual experi- ence, but beyond the human. It entails a utopian loss of the ego in the process of blissfully merging with a larger self that includes the alien other. If any- thing, the non-gendered ooloi who bring pleasure to all are the ultimate cy- borgs, existing at the boundary between/beyond gender. Perhaps the best reading of the XENOGENESIS trilogy is Cathy Peppers' "Dialogic Origins and Alien Identities in Butler's XENOGENESIS," in which she discusses how "XENOGENESIS contests our culture's most powerful originary discourses (Biblical, biological, anthropological).. .by keeping each one in dialogue with the others" (61). Hence, Butler's genesis story both evokes and This content downloaded from 128.138.65.57 on Wed, 29 Jun 2016 17:31:12 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
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