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Octavia Butler‚ Audre Lorde‚ and the Power of Pleasure
Book Recommendations Octavia Butler Octavia Butler‚ Audre Lorde‚ and the Power of Pleasure In three of her stranger works‚ Butler asks us to interrogate the nature of pleasure‚ and the relationships and connections made possible through desire. By Logan Dreher | Published on April 8‚ 2024 Comment 0 Share New Share As weve reached the year in which Octavia Butlers Parable of the Sower begins‚ its become something of a clich to comment on how prophetic the novel truly is. The Earthseed duology‚ which imagines a world ravaged by climate chaos and besieged by incipient fascism‚ is frightening prescient. Its no wonder countless podcasts‚ think pieces‚ and social media posts have proclaimed‚ Octavia was right!And dont get me wrong‚ I love the Parable series. It certainly deserves its praise‚ as does Octavia Butler‚ whose visionary career paved the way for a new generation of Black SFF writers. But I also think the acclaim around the Parables sometimes eclipses Butlers other work‚ which is just as fascinating‚ just as disturbing and challenging. Octavia Butler has more to tell us than what we can glean from Parable of the Sower.Ive been especially interested in revisiting three of her strangest worksher vampire novel Fledging; Bloodchild‚a short story about a colony of humans living alongside an insectoid race of aliens; and the Xenogenesis trilogy‚ which explores humans post-apocalypse relationship with a bioengineering race of extraterrestrials called the Oankali. Across these stories‚ I see a recurring fascination with the reality of our bodies‚ our needs and frailties‚ and the way our bodily desires inextricably link us to each other.In each of these stories‚ humans are less powerful than their nonhuman counterparts‚ whether thats the tentacled‚ pheromone-exuding Oankali in Xenogenesis or the three-meter long‚ centipede-like Tlic in Bloodchild. But for all of their physical superiority‚ the nonhuman characters are desperately reliant on their relationships with humans. In Xenogenesis‚ the Oankali can exude chemicals that drug humans with a thought and heal with a touch. They manipulate their own genetic makeup and easily heal their own bullet wounds. Yet they depend on their human relationships in order to live. Oankali adolescents go into metamorphosis where they are comatoseprofoundly helplessand rely on their human partners to care for them. In Imago‚ the final book in the trilogy‚ a young Oankali begins to physically dissolve‚ unable to survive because it does not have human companions to ground it in a stable form. As the narrator notes‚ We called our need for contact with others and our need for mates hunger. One who could hunger could starve.And in Fledgling‚ the Inaarent your typical vampires who can feed on any convenient person. They instead form lifelong connections with human symbionts and hunger for physical intimacy just as they do for blood. This relationship is one of mutual symbiosis‚ as human symbionts live longer and healthier lives than typical humans. For both Ina and their symbionts‚ these relationships come with challenges; much of Fledgling is about navigating the tangled web of resentment and jealousy in these sprawling‚ polyamorous households as Shori‚ the novels vampiric protagonist‚ learns how to care for her symbionts and let them care for her.There are similar themes in Bloodchild.In the story‚ the Tlic aliens rely on human hosts to carry their parasitic eggs. Tlic grubs born from human bodies are bigger‚ healthier‚ and more likely to live. Its implied that the Tlic were sickly‚ perhaps even dying out‚ before humans crash-landed on their planet. The humans are restricted to a patrolled area called the Preserve‚ but the Tlic are dependent on humans for their own species survival; they regard humans with a desperate eagerness. Bloodchild references a past where humans were treated as little more than animals‚ but in the storys present time Tlic are integrated into the families of their hosts and the position is one of honor. Humans are necessities‚ status symbols‚ and an independent people.Bloodchild is sometimes interpreted as an allegory for slavery‚ an interpretation Butler flatly deniesIt isnt‚ she says in the storys afterword. She describes it instead as a love story between two very different beingsbetween Gan‚ a teenage human boy‚ and TGatoi‚ the insectoid alien who will come to implant her eggs in his body by the storys end. Butler also said she wanted to challenge herself to write a story where a man chooses to be impregnated as an act of love.Bloodchild has a lot of body horror for a love story. Gan witnesses a Tlic birth gone wrong‚ a bloody and painful affair that seems to him like a form of torture as the ravenous grubs burst from a mans fleshGan thinks‚ it was worse than finding something dead‚ rotting. Theres horror in Butlers others stories‚ too. Shori‚ starved and gravely injured‚ kills and eats a man in one of the first scenes in Fledgling. And across the Xenogenesis trilogy humans struggle with their horror of the Oankali‚ their revulsion at something so alien‚ so different from our own bodies.Despite their revulsion‚ despite the bloody horror of Tlic birth or the slimy Oankali tentacles‚ the human characters in these stories still chose to join with the alien‚ the nonhuman; to become their symbionts‚ to reach eagerly for those same tentacles‚ to be held still and impregnated with Tlic eggs. In Bloodchild‚ Gan chooses to be implanted out of obligation‚ but afterward‚ as he rests his naked skin against hers‚ he admits it was to also because he wanted to keep TGatoi for himself. In this choice I see Octavia Butlers fascination with pleasure‚ its seduction‚ its irresistibility. She seems to be asking: what does pleasure do for us? What does it make us willing to give up?The pursuit of pleasure is often treated as hedonistic or self-indulgent. As Audre Lorde says in her 1978 essay on the power of the erotic‚ we have been raised to fear the yes within ourselves‚ our deepest cravings. In Butlers stories‚ characters follow their own pleasure‚ whether thats the sensual bite of a vampire or the healing of the Oankalis tentacles. But her characters arent punished for this pursuit. Pleasure is depicted as seductive‚ as addicting‚ but not shameful.Instead‚ pleasure becomes a way of overcoming what Lorde calls the threat of difference‚ the means by which the human and nonhuman characters come to better understand each other. Pleasure is‚ as Lorde says‚ a bridge between the sharers which can be the basis for understanding much of what is not shared between them.In the final book of the Xenogenesis series‚ the Oankali discover a group of humans who have resisted their influence. Hidden in the mountains‚ the human colony has persisted for generations to preserve the human race by refusing to birth constructsthe children born of both humans and Oankali. Generations of inbreeding has burdened the colony with congenital diseases that leave them in physical pain and increasingly disabled. Their young people are offered few other options than to marry and keep having babies; some of the residents are driven to suicide by the bleakness of their lives.As the colony is seduced by Oankali‚ the residents desire for pleasure isnt depicted as immoral or self-destructive. Pleasure is a guidepost‚ a way of moving the colony from a life of unnecessary suffering to one of healing‚ satisfaction‚ and connection. Once the residents experience the pleasure of being with the Oankali‚ its unimaginable that they could return to a life of such pain. This is the power of the erotic that Audre Lorde names: its ability to teach us the pleasure our bodies can experience‚ to demand of ourselves and the world the fullness of feeling we have learned we are capable of.Fledgling‚ Bloodchild‚and the Xenogenesis series arent without their violation or violence. Theres an aspect of coercion to all of these relationships; the Ina and Oankali have physically addictive qualities that make consent to their partnerships uncertain. The Oankali‚ especially‚ often manipulate and lie to their human counterparts as part of their seduction‚ and its eventually revealed that they will destroy the Earth through their habitation‚ leaving only an empty husk behind.Despite Butlers objections‚ you can read Bloodchildas a parable for slavery‚ or at the very least as a story of an alien race violently exploiting a captive colony of humans as meat for their parasitic children. And lets not even get into the disturbing sexual politics of Fledgling‚ a book where a vampire in the body of a child seduces several adults into sexual relationships. To be sure‚ Butler explores violation alongside pleasure. But I think thats intentional. Our own relationships are not without the complications of power‚ exploitation‚ or hierarchy. Pleasure is a bridge‚ and any connection has the potential for harm.This is explicitly discussed in the climax of Bloodchild.After witnessing the gore of a Tlic birth Gan‚ sickened and terrified of his own fate‚ threatens his life with an illegal gun. Though TGatoi talks him down from any bloodshed‚ he convinces her to let him keep the gun despite the danger it poses to her safety. As Gan tells her‚ If were not your animals‚ if these are adult things‚ accept the risk. There is a risk‚ Gatoi‚ in dealing with a partner.All of these stories explore how to deal with this risk‚ and with how to care for ourselves and each other across such immense difference. Though they are capable of physically overpowering them‚ the Ina‚ the Oankali‚ the Tlic all learn to give back to the humans they come to see as partners; to share in pleasure‚ to heal‚ to care for them. They learn to make concessions for the benefit of their relationships‚ to give their human partners autonomy knowing that autonomy comes with risk. Sometimes that leads to violence‚ as it does it in our world.Like the characters in Butlers books our bodies‚ our desires‚ entangle us in relationships of mutual dependence‚ whether those relationships are sexual‚ platonic‚ or familial. And if pleasure is as Butler imagines itaddicting‚ irresistible; if it is not frivolous but necessary and life-sustaining as Audre Lorde argues‚ if our pleasure depends on the pleasure of others‚ then it also a responsibility. We all hunger‚ and anyone who can hunger can starve. With these stories I see Octavia Butler asking us to interrogate what we owe to the partnerships that shape our lives and our future‚ what our obligations are to the people we rely on‚ the ones who care for us when were sick and who share our joys as their own.[end-mark]The post Octavia Butler‚ Audre Lorde‚ and the Power of Pleasure appeared first on Reactor.