Early modern times As early as
the English Restoration, female authors were using themes of SF and imagined futures to explore women's issues, roles, and place in society. This can be seen as early as 1666 in
Margaret Cavendish's
The Blazing World, in which she describes a utopian kingdom ruled by an empress. This foundational work has garnered attention from some
feminist critics, such as
Dale Spender, who considered this a forerunner of the science fiction genre, more generally. Another early female
writer of science fiction was
Mary Shelley. Her novel
Frankenstein (1818) dealt with the
asexual creation of new life, and has been considered by some a reimagining of the
Adam and Eve story. Her book is a critique of
Darwinist ideas and also of the use of science without ethical reflection, as well as of the seventeenth-century view that science was endowed with a certain virility aimed at penetrating the secrets of nature, presented as other, feminine and objectified. The book paved the way for future explorations of the
cyborg theme by feminist science fiction and had a lasting influence. In France, feminist writer
Marie-Anne de Roumier-Robert's
The Voyages of Lord Seaton to the Seven Planets, published in 1758, is considered one of the first science fiction novels. Refusing to overlook the contribution made by women to science and culture for the sole benefit of men, Marie-Anne Robert wrote an initiatory tale designed to develop women's critical faculties, and ultimately work towards their emancipation.
First-wave feminism (suffrage) , a
Bengali feminist who in 1905 wrote one of the earliest feminist science fiction, ''
Sultana's Dream''. She is considered to be one of the earliest
Muslim feminists. published in 1909 features the first super superheroine. Women writers involved in the
utopian literature movement of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries could be considered the first feminist SF authors. Their texts, emerging during the
first-wave feminist movement, often addressed issues of sexism through imagining different worlds that challenged gender expectations. In 1881,
Mizora: A Prophecy described a
women-only world with technological innovations such as
parthenogenesis, videophones, and artificial meat.
Unveiling a Parallel (1893) features a male protagonist who takes an "aeroplane" to Mars, visiting two different "Marsian" societies; in both, there is equality between men and women. In one, Paleveria, women have adopted the negative characteristics of men; in Caskia, the other, gender equality "has made both sexes kind, loving, and generous." Two American Populists, A.O. Grigsby and Mary P. Lowe, published
NEQUA or The Problem of the Ages (
1900), which explores issues of gender norms and posited
structural inequality. This recently rediscovered novel displays familiar feminist SF conventions: a heroine narrator who masquerades as a man, the exploration of sexist mores, and the description of a future
hollow earth society (like
Mizora) where women are equal. ''
Sultana's Dream'' (1905), by
Rokeya Sakhawat Hussain, a
Bengali writer and
Muslim feminist, engages with the limited role of women in
colonial India. Through depicting a gender-reversed
purdah in an alternate technologically futuristic world, Rokeya Sakhawat Hussain's book has been described as illustrating the potential for cultural insights through role reversals early on in the subgenre's formation. In the
utopian novel Beatrice the Sixteenth (1909), transgender writer
Irene Clyde creates a world where gender is no longer recognized and the story itself is told without the use of gendered nouns. Along these same lines,
Charlotte Perkins Gilman explores and critiques the expectations of women and men by creating a single-sex world in
Herland (1915), possibly the most well-known of the early feminist SF and utopian novels. In 1909, the French author
Renée Marie Gouraud d'Ablancourt published
Vega la magicienne, depicting
L'Oiselle, a winged superheroine and the first Francophone superhero series.
Rhoda Broughton is also one of a number of 19th-century women writing in the successful science fiction genre.
Rosa Rosà (Edith von Haynau) wrote the first Italian feminist science fiction with
Una donna con tre anime in 1918.
Between the wars During the 1920s and 1930s, many popular pulp science fiction magazines exaggerated views of masculinity and featured portrayals of women that were perceived as sexist. These views would be subtly satirized by
Stella Gibbons in
Cold Comfort Farm (1932) and much later by
Margaret Atwood in
The Blind Assassin (2000). As early as 1920, however, women writers of this time, such as
Clare Winger Harris ("The Runaway World," 1926) and
Gertrude Barrows Bennett (
Claimed, 1920), published science fiction stories written from female perspectives and occasionally dealt with gender and sexuality-based topics.
John Wyndham, writing under his early pen-name of John Beynon Harris, was a rare pulp writer to include female leads in stories such as "The Venus Adventure" (
Wonder Stories, 1932), in which a mixed crew travel to Venus. The story opens in a future in which women are no longer enslaved by pregnancy and childbirth thanks to artificial incubators, which are opposed by a religious minority. Women have used this freedom to enter professions including chemistry. Wyndham's outlook was so rare that in a serialisation of his novel
Stowaway to Mars, one magazine editor "corrected" the name of the central character Joan to John. Wyndham then had to write them a new final instalment to replace the conclusion in which Joan fell in love and became pregnant.
The Fate of the Poseidonia, 1927 '', December 1926, which describes
Clare Winger Harris's short story "The Fate of the Poseidonia". The first science fiction story published in a magazine by a woman in America was
The Fate of the Poseidonia, written by
Clare Winger Harris in 1927. The story was published by
Hugo Gernsback in the pulp magazine
Amazing Stories. The story was published as part of a science fiction competition, in which 300 short stories were proposed. Hugo Gernsback put out a call to his magazine's readership for this competition, inviting them to send in texts describing the cover of Amazing Stories in December 1926. The cover featured an ocean liner floating in space. Using the term 'fans' to describe his male and female readers, blurring the boundary between readership and writing, he allowed women to take part for the first time. The 1920s saw the establishment of what was later to become 'fandom'.
Post World War II The
Post-WWII and
Cold War eras were a pivotal and often overlooked period in feminist SF history.
increased economic mobility of an emerging middle class, and an emphasis on consumptive practices, carved out a new technological domestic sphere where women were circumscribed to a new job description – the professional
housewife. Published feminist SF stories were told from the perspectives of women (characters and authors) who often identified within traditional roles of housewives or homemakers, a subversive act in many ways given the traditionally male-centered nature of the SF genre and society during that time. Three notable texts of this period are
Ursula K. Le Guin's
The Left Hand of Darkness (1969),
Marge Piercy's
Woman on the Edge of Time (1976) and
Joanna Russ's
The Female Man (1970). Each highlights what the authors believe to be the socially constructed aspects of
gender roles by creating worlds with genderless societies. Two of these authors were pioneers in
feminist criticism of science fiction during the 1960s and 1970s through essays collected in
The Language of the Night (Le Guin, 1979) and ''How To Suppress Women's Writing'' (Russ, 1983). Also of note,
Madeleine L'Engle's
A Wrinkle in Time (1962), written for children and teens, features a 13-year-old girl protagonist, Meg Murry, whose mother, Mrs. Murry, is a scientist with degrees in biology and bacteriology. L'Engle's novel is decidedly science fiction, feminist, and deeply Christian, and the first of her series,
The Time Quintet. Meg's adventures to other planets, galaxies, and dimensions are aided in
Wrinkle by three ancient beings, Mrs What, Mrs Which, and Mrs Who who "
tesser" to travel vast distances.
A Wrinkle in Time was awarded the
Newbery Medal in 1963 and has never been out of print. Men also contributed literature to feminist science fiction. Prominently,
Samuel R. Delany's short story, "
Time Considered as a Helix of Semi-Precious Stones" (1968), which won the
Hugo Award for Best Short Story in 1970, follows the life of a gay man that includes themes involving sadomasochism, gender, significance of language, and when high and low society encounter one another, while his novel
Babel-17 has a Chinese woman as its primary hero and protagonist. Octavia Butler's
Kindred (1979) tells the story of an African American woman living in the United States in 1979 who uncontrollably time travels to the antebellum South. The novel poses complicated questions about the nature of sexuality, gender, and race when the present faces the past. Tepper has written under several pseudonyms, including A. J. Orde, E. E. Horlak, and B. J. Oliphant.
Carol Emshwiller is another feminist SF author whose best known works are
Carmen Dog (1988),
The Mount (2002), and
Mister Boots (2005). Emshwiller had also been writing SF for
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction since 1974. She won the
World Fantasy Award for
Life Achievement in 2005 for her novel
The Mount (2002). Another author of the 1980s,
Pamela Sargent has written the "Seed Series", which included
Earthseed,
Farseed, and
Seed Seeker (1983–2010), the "Venus Series" about the
terraforming of Venus, which includes
Venus of Dreams,
Venus of Shadows, and
Child of Venus (1986–2001), and
The Shore of Women (1986). Sargent is also the 2012 winner of the
Pilgrim Award for lifetime contributions to SF/F studies.
Lois McMaster Bujold has won both the
Hugo Award and the
Nebula Award for her novella
The Mountains of Mourning, which is part of her series the "
Vorkosigan Saga" (1986–2012). This saga includes points of view from a number of minority characters, and is also highly concerned with
medical ethics,
identity, and
sexual reproduction. More recent science fiction authors illuminate what they contend are injustices that are still prevalent. At the time of the
LA Riots, Japanese-American writer
Cynthia Kadohata's work
In the Heart of the Valley of Love (1992) was published. Her story, set in the year 2052, examines tensions between two groups as defined as the "haves" and the "have-nots" and is written as seen through the eyes of a nineteen-year-old girl who is of Asian and African descent.
Nalo Hopkinson's
Falling in Love With Hominids (2015) is a collection of her short stories whose subjects range from an historical fantasy involving colonialism in the Caribbean, to age manipulation, to ethnic diversity in the land of Faerie, among others. In the early 1990s, a new award opportunity for feminist SF authors was created. The
James Tiptree, Jr. Award is an annual literary prize for works of science fiction or
fantasy that expand or explore one's understanding of
gender (
Alice Sheldon was a female writer who published science fiction under the Tiptree pen name). Science fiction authors
Pat Murphy and
Karen Joy Fowler initiated this subsequent discussion at
WisCon in February 1991. The authors' publishing in feminist SF after 1991 were now eligible for an award named after one of the genre's beloved authors.
Karen Joy Fowler herself is considered a feminist SF writer for her short stories, such as "What I Didn't See", for which she received the
Nebula Award in 2004. This story is an homage to Sheldon, and describes a gorilla hunting expedition in Africa.
Pat Murphy won a number of awards for her feminist SF novels as well, including her second novel
The Falling Woman (1986), a tale of personal conflict and visionary experiences set during an archaeological field study for which she won the
Nebula Award in 1988. She won another
Nebula Award in the same year for her story "
Rachel in Love". Her short story collection,
Points of Departure (1990) won the
Philip K. Dick Award, and her 1990 novella "Bones" won the 1991
World Fantasy Award. Other winners of the James Tiptree, Jr. Award include "The Sparrow" by
Mary Doria Russell (1996), "Black Wine" by
Candas Jane Dorsey (1997),
Redwood and Wildfire by
Andrea Hairston (2011), "The Carhullan Army" by
Sarah Hall (2007),
Ammonite by
Nicola Griffith (1993), and "The Conqueror's Child" by
Suzy McKee Charnas (1999). All of these authors have had an important impact on the SF world by adding a feminist perspective to the traditionally male genre.
Eileen Gunn's science fiction short story "Coming to Terms" received the
Nebula Award (2004) in the United States and the
Sense of Gender Award (2007) in Japan, and has been nominated twice each for the
Hugo Award,
Philip K. Dick Award and
World Fantasy Award, and short-listed for the
James Tiptree, Jr. Award. Her most popular anthology of short stories is
Questionable Practices, which includes stories "Up the Fire Road" and "Chop Wood, Carry Water". She also edited "The WisCon Chronicles 2: Provocative Essays on Feminism, Race, Revolution, and the Future" with
L. Timmel Duchamp.
Duchamp has been known in the feminist SF community for her first novel
Alanya to Alanya (2005), the first of a series of five titled "The Marq'ssan Cycle".
Alanya to Alanya is set on a near-future earth controlled by a male-dominated ruling class patterned loosely after the corporate world of today.
Duchamp has also published a number of short stories, and is an editor for
Aqueduct Press.
Lisa Goldstein is another well respected feminist sf author. The novelette
Dark Rooms (2007) is one of her better known works, and another one of her novels,
The Uncertain Places, won the
Mythopoeic Award for Best Adult Novel in 2012. ==Recurrent themes==