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Research Journal Entries[edit]

Journal Entry # 1[edit]

Today, we learned about the basics of editing Wikipedia, first creating our own usernames and then learning how to start editing and citing sources on Wikipedia. We practiced on sandbox and had a refresher in the library database. We also learned about what we're doing this semester and hoping to accomplish.

Journal Entry # 2[edit]

We worked in groups to critique each other's biography summaries of Octavia Butler, and then as a class made a list of the most important aspects that should be included. We also worked with a partner to read bits of Octavia Butler interviews and paraphrase them.

Journal Entry # 3[edit]

We went over last week's group interview paraphrases to critique them. We also talked about the structure of an essay, mainly thesis and topic sentences, and also more about quoting, paraphrasing, and summarizing. Lastly, we were given a longer analysis of Wild Seed broken down into topic paragraphs. In new groups, we paraphrased/quoted a paragraph of this analysis.

Journal Entry # 4[edit]

Today, we took a look at Wikipedia's current entry for Wild Seed for the first time, comparing what's currently there to the WikiProject's style guidelines for novels. In groups, we decided what was good and what was bad about the information there, making suggestions for changes on the Talk page. Then, we looked back over our past group paraphrases of interviews and reviews of Wild Seed, breaking them down into possible sources for the Wild Seed Wikipedia entry, and decided most of them fell into the Themes, Background, and Reception categories. Lastly, we read an article by Orson Scott Card on how Octavia Butler writes exposition in Wild Seed, summarizing his points in the sandbox.

Journal Entry # 5[edit]

Today, we did Research Assignment # 3 in class, looking at the library archives to find the articles and writing summaries on our sandboxes. We also discussed the articles as a class, and went over how to cite them.

Journal Entry # 6[edit]

First, we went over last week's homework, the articles by Duchamp and Holden to make sure everyone understood the main points. Discussions included second wave feminism in the 70s, the pushback against it and the "earth mother" idea, and the way Butler contributed to feminist sf with her new narrative and inclusion of a black female protagonist. Then, we finished Research Assignment # 3 from last week, ending with ranking of what article we'd most want to do for homework in Research Assignment # 5.

Journal Entry # 7[edit]

At the start of class, we got into groups based on which article we close for Research Assignment # 5 to discuss the main points, and then presented them to the rest of the class. Then, we went over our essay, especially the proposal for it that's due Saturday, which includes a header, title, and summary of what your topic of the paper will be, as well as what approach you will take (supporting/agreeing with a source? Disagreeing? Expanding on it?). You'll write a tentative thesis, and pick five-ish sources that you will maybe use in writing your essay.

Journal Entry # 8[edit]

We got into groups to look at different aspects of the Wikipedia article. My group worked on Plot, and the other part of our group worked on the feminist ideas. After that, we looked at our proposals that were due on Saturday, and also went over the assignments of our essay: first draft and final draft.

Journal Entry # 9[edit]

This week, we continued our groups from last week but shifted around to edit/work on different parts of the article. We worked on the ecofeminism theme in Wild Seed. Then, we again went over our proposals, and submitted a thesis to be looked at and edited.

Journal Entry # 10[edit]

We got into our groups once again to look at the Plot, first as a group and then reading it with the whole class and discussing ways to finalize changes. We also worked on our essays in class.

Research Assignment # 1[edit]

1. Octavia Butler, born June 22, 1947, was raised by her mother and grandmother in an integrated community in Pasadena, California. Despite being slightly dyslexic, she was a voracious reader and writer, and it soon became her goal to become published for writing in the science fiction genre. Her career path was shaped by her experiences as a black woman: first being told that she couldn’t be a writer because she was black, then struggling to form a distinct style of her own with mainly white male authors to look to in the science fiction genre. She even got the idea for her most famous novel, Kindred, from listening to criticisms of the “subservience” of black people in the past by an African American classmate in college. It was through the Open Door Workshop, a program where minority writers were mentored, that she was guided onto the proper path, where she was encouraged to attend the Clarion Science Fiction Writers Workshop. From there, she was able to sell her first two stories, and by 1978, Butler was able to live off her writing alone. After that, her works were generally met with acclaim. She won many awards, including a Hugo Award for Short Story and Best Novelette, the Lotus Award, and the Nebula Award. She was also the first science-fiction writer to win a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation fellowship. Octavia Butler died in 2006, leaving behind a legacy. A memorial scholarship was enacted in her name to support students of color in attending the offshoots of the Clarion Science Fiction Writers Workshop where Butler was originally given her "big break". [1]

  1. ^ Wikipedia contributors. "Octavia E. Butler." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 13 Sep. 2015. Web. 24 Sep. 2015.

2. My impression of Butler is that she wasn't only talented and intelligent, but had a formidable will. Despite being told along the way that she couldn't find success as an author, she persisted, going to college and writing at night while she made a living in various jobs during the day. Although she apparently struggled at first to write in a genre dominated by white men, she not only remained undiscouraged, but she tackled racial issues in her writing. I had known some basic things about the plot to Kindred, but hearing that it was essentially a defense of slaves and an chastisement to people like her classmate was new to me, and very interesting. It's inspiring that she became so well-known and beloved for her work as a black woman, to the point where she was given an honor that no other science fiction writer had been given before in the MacArthur Foundation fellowship.

Research Assignment # 2[edit]

Vampires Aliens, and Dodos, by Elizabeth A. Lynn[edit]
  • Main theme: what it means to be a human.
  • Contrast between Doro and Anyanwu, and the ways in which she is a match for him.
  • Description of Butler's writing style, and the way historical context lends sense of realism to the novel.

"Immortality, shape-changing, psychic powers, the passing of one mind into many bodies: these are not new ideas to the science fiction canon, and the theme of what it means to be human has fascinated sf writers since Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein." This quote could go to themes, as well as reception.

"Butler's prose is sparse and sure, and even in moments of great tension she never loses control over her pacing or over her sense of story." This quote describes Butler's style of writing, which could become its own section on Wikipedia.

Octavia Estelle Butler (b. 1947), by Pfeiffer[edit]
  • Wild Seed allowed Butler to write about black women being able to overcome things in a bigger way, because Anyanwu's immortality and powers allowed her to do more than just survive, but to fight back and make greater strides.
  • Main struggle (between Doro and Anyanwu) is more about gender than race.
  • However, Anyanwu's struggles parallel slavery in some ways, like her passage from Africa to America, and, is a theme of the book: Anyanwu needing to disguise herself as a white man at times for safety.
  • Doro isn't lovable, but he and Anyanwu seem like each other's perfect balance, so there's a wish for them to love each other.

"Doro looms as a symbol of the perversity of male-dominated human history." This quote could go to themes. It's clear at this point that gender and the patriarchal society is a big theme of Wild Seed, and this could help support that.

"Butler said that in Kindred she 'couldn't change history--at least not in the kind of book I had chosen to write. So my characters couldn't realistically win much more than their lives. But in Wild Seed, a different sort of book, my characters could be powerful enough to move somewhat outside the ugliness of antebellum U.S. history even though they live through it. Their struggle is more male-female than Black-White.'" This quote is interesting because it comes directly from Butler, and talks about how the way the specific kind of sf/fantasy in Wild Seed allowed her to break some of the realism boundaries. This can also talk about themes, as well as background because it talks about Butler's motivations in writing the book.

Wild Seed, by Michael Bishop[edit]
  • Bishop responds to an old criticism of Survivor by Cherry Wilder, and how Wild Seed addresses/fixes these objections
  • Talks about the conflicts of duty vs. desire, conscience vs. expediency, and both longing for power and disgust at witnessing its abuse.
  • Themes are revealed organically through the characters
  • Bishop is impressed by the way she takes some familiar conventions and makes them her own, and how she lends realism by dealing more with the past than the future.
  • He doesn't like that she doesn't go into scenes and new settings as much as she could, but acknowledges that she has a minimalist approach overall and he maybe shouldn't criticize her for not doing something she purposefully doesn't want to do.

"A love story, then, but one in which love in annihilated by betrayal, threat, and active cruelty, only to reassert itself, tentatively, in Anyanwu's melancholy acceptance of Doro's inhuman nature." Bishop is one of the only people to talk about this as a love story, if a twisted one, so I think this could be an interesting inclusion in talking about themes.

"Butler makes her minimalist approach work in the same way a skillful playwright exploits the possibilities of a naked stage." If we write a section on Butler's style in Wild Seed, this passage could go to it.

Research Assignment # 3[edit]

Connections, Links, and Extended Networks: Patterns in Octavia Butler’s Science Fiction, by Sandra Y. Govan[edit]
  • Butler's interest in power developed because she didn't have any, and she was interested in writing about its politics and dynamics.
  • Biggest power struggle is between Doro and Anyanwu, and all of Butler's novels seem to share basic theme of a heroine going through tests of her will and endurance.
  • Doro breeds people and manipulates people, like Anyanwu, to obey him in his seed towns.
  • Doro is eventually forced to bow to Anyanwu's will when she threatens to commit suicide, something he could not prevent by threatening her or by his dominance. She doesn't do this to manipulate him, but he nonetheless changes his ways somewhat.
  • Butler is noteworthy in using black characters in a way almost never seen in sf/fantasy, and if they are, they're generally stereotypical. Wild Seed not only uses black protagonists, but uses settings like Africa and African history, and discusses slavery in America.
  • They replicate their kinship in relationship with fellow mutants in Doro's seed villages and Anyanwu's farm in Louisiana.
  • Discussion of the books Mind of My Mind, Survivor, Patternmaster, and Kindred, and the way the heroines also follow the "model" Anyanwu does. They all share the themes of adaptability, survival, and difference in their narratives. They are also paired with/contrasted a powerful male figure, again going to the theme of power and gender differences.

Govan, Sandra Y. "Connections, Links, and Extended Networks: Patterns in Octavia Butler's Science Fiction." Black American Literature Forum 18.2 (Summer 1984): 82-84.

Homage to Tradition: Octavia Butler Renovates the Historical Novel, by Sandra Y. Govan[edit]
  • Butler borrows from tradition, and seems to look more at the past in her sf writing. This isn't innovative in itself: what is is the way she links it specifically to the African experience and black slave experience.
  • Slave narratives in general aware of "double consciousness", warring selves.
  • Butler explores intersection of slave narrative, historical novel, & science fiction. Built on conventions of these genres, but defies expectations in the way the genres merge, the sf making a kind of parallel/alternate history.
  • Themes: alienation, loneliness, ambition, power, love. Africa provides cultural background. History and culture is more than just background - it tells you a lot about the characters, etc, and puts a more original twist on some of the themes.
  • Wild Seed's conflict - Doro trying to make Anyanwu submissive, and her fighting back.
  • Kinship huge theme - Doro doesn't follow any cultural belief. He only cares about breeding stock. Anyanwu also cares about mutant connections, but makes something more like an extended family based on those she wants to gather around her and help.
  • A black woman protagonist featured - doesn't yield integrity or submit to a man.
  • History is integral to plot, and novel grounded in cultural history.

Quote # 1: "Anyanwu's sense of protection, her maternal instinct of care and concern for her people, is part of the African ethos which pervades the text. Of paramount importance to Anyanwu is the well being and safety of her kin - her children and her grandchildren. (...) Doro's power play, his perception of the most immediate method he can use to control Anyanwu reflects his understanding of cultural ties, of the "appropriate manner and customs" which are part of Anyanwu's historical legacy." (85-86)

  • This can come up when we talk about the themes of gender and the essential conflict between Anyanwu and Doro, and also if there is a section on the role African culture plays in the novel.

Quote # 2: "African kinship networks seem to be the major structural device Butler uses to build dramatic complexity in this novel. When the principal characters first meet, the question of identity is crucial. Following the customary 'who are you?' comes the equally important 'who are your people?' The latter question springs from the African sense of connectedness to a specific place, a specific people, or a specific heritage." (86)

  • Like the above, this quote could build on a section about the African culture explored in Wild Seed, as well as a specific theme of kinship/family/etc that crops up with Doro's seed villages, Anyanwu's community in Louisiana, and the ultimate goal both characters are trying to reach by finding others with special abilities.

Quote # 3: "'Wheatley' is an allusion to young Phillis Wheatley, the child stolen from Africa who became known as the 'Sable Muse' and was recognized as a significant contributor to the 18th-century American poetry." (87)

  • This could be an interesting bit for the Background section, as well as themes when once again talking about race in Wild Seed.

Govan, Sandra Y. "Homage to Tradition: Octavia Butler Renovates the Historical Novel." MELUS 13.1/2 (Spring-Summer 1986): 79-96.

Octavia Butler and the Science-Fiction Heroine, by Ruth Salvaggio[edit]
  • Science fiction traditionally dominated by men - more recently, women authors have become more prominent. Butler is both an example of that and something new: her female protagonists are black, and her stories talk about the dynamic of both race and gender in society.
  • All of Butler's protagonists are black, but Anyanwu is the only one born in Africa. She provides a foundation for all of Butler's protagonists, just as the events of Wild Seed provide a foundation for what comes in the Patternist series, even though it wasn't the first book written.
  • Anyanwu is a slave to Doro in many ways. After running away from him, she lives in Louisiana and runs a plantation, but in slave territory she runs a free household with a family of other outsiders with special abilities. When Doro finds her, he again imposes his will upon her and her people.
  • Doro has more power than Anyanwu when it comes to being able to control others, but she has more flexibility with hers. He can live forever and change form by killing people and take over their bodies, but she is able to survive in her original body by healing herself and changing her appearance. In general, Butler contrasts Doro's more blunt force with Anyanwu's more adaptable, healing powers.
  • All of the stories talk about the protagonists' struggles to gain that autonomy. Unlike many feminist sf novels of the time that were set in utopias, these characters face enormous obstacles of sexism and racism. The women win by compromises, and instead of women "replacing" men in terms of power, they fight to change the power structure. For example, in Wild Seed Doro isn't killed, but he is ultimately changed by Anyanwu and they both make compromises.
  • Context: Second Wave feminism.

Salvaggio, Ruth. "Octavia Butler and the Black Science-Fiction Heroine." Black American Literature Forum 18.2 (1984): 78-81.

Research Assignment # 4[edit]

“I began writing about power because I had so little": The Impact of Octavia Butler’s Early Work on feminist Science Fiction as a Whole (and on One Feminist Science Fiction Scholar in Particular), by Rebecca J. Holden[edit]
  • This was written in 2013. Holden was introduced to Butler in the mid-90s, in research for her dissertation on feminist science fiction
  • Butler drew on African mythology and slave narrative; was like nothing else in sf at the time. Holden argues Butler had a major influence on the genre.
  • Holden goes over some history of feminist sf - in the 60s and 70s, it was primarily utopias where gender discrimination didn't exist. Women of color weren't really represented - even if they were present, women were more seen as a monolith. Black women, in general, were less visible; the civil rights movement focusing more on black men, and the feminist movement on white women. These two groups were often pit against each other, leaving black women ignored yet still expected to "pick a side". Butler refused to do so, and that's reflected in the themes in her work.
  • Holden talks about term "cyborg identity", introduced by Donna Haraway, and how it applies to Butler's work and heroines. It's a pushback against some of those feminist utopias, and also dystopias, as well as the gender essentialism of the stereotypical "Earth Mother" idea. It takes both positive and negative qualities of technology.
  • Butler uses themes of mutation, genetic engineering, etc, without losing culture. History informs these characters.
  • In Patternmaster, Butler de-emphasizes race and gender, but not in the "feminist utopia" way other sf writers often did. She still focuses on power, and its only those without power (with weak or no abilities) or outside of the norm whose race is described/emphasized. This relates to the way whiteness (and maleness) is seen as the default. In Mind of My Mind, this power difference and the way it has come to replace race is highlighted more clearly. Butler isn't writing an allegory or a parallel to race, because racial issues aren't entirely absent in her world. There are just additional things at play.
  • There's some criticism of strict gender roles, particularly in Wild Seed (i.e. Anyanwu nurturing and Doro domineering)
  • Butler contributed to feminist sf not just by having black heroines, but by the themes she wrote about, and how there were no easy answers but just complex questions posed and compromises made by Anyanwu in Wild Seed. Butler shifted trend away from utopias.

Quote # 1: "Butler's choice of black female protagonists, emphasis on biological technologies and disease, and incorporation of African-American history, forces readers and writers of feminist sf to step back and acknowledge historical, cultural, and socio-economic differences among women. Her refusal to reduce her complex characters with their multiple narratives of identity to simple, more recognizable heroines reveals true alternatives for imagining feminist stories of the past and future."

  • I think this quote is important because it eloquently states something many articles have said so far, and speaks both to reception (why Butler's work is so groundbreaking and speaks to so many) and themes, in some of the complexities Butler is bringing into her work.

Quote # 2: "An initial glance at Anyanwu's story may align her with the "archetypal" mother figures, such as those found in Gearhart's Wanderground where women are considered to be naturally less violent, more nurturing, more connected to nature, less competitive, and more communal than men. Critics writing in the 1980s often stressed what they saw as the biologically-determined aspects of gender in Wild Seed. For example, Sandra Y. Govan states that Doro's "is the more terrible power; he kills instantaneously whenever he takes a host body. But (Anyanwu's] is the nurturing healing power of the archetypal earth mother" (1984, 83). Similarly, Ruth Salvaggio states that "Doro's paternal concerns revolve around his mechanical breeding experiments: He does not create children, but Frankenstein monsters. Anyanwu's maternity, however, is the main source of her being, the principal reason for her existence" (1984, 81). Some later critics, like Hoda Zaki, highlight the problems inherent in the gender essentialism that they see in the work of Butler and her contemporaries: "Butler, in describing her heroines as nurturing, freedomloving women who employ violence only for the sake of survival, shares with other feminist sf writers the same truncated assumptions about women's and men's natures even though she does not place gender concerns conspicuously at the center of her novels" (1990, 246)."

  • Even though these are other quotes, not Holden's direct crit, they're more critical than anything else I've seen so far on Wild Seed. These quotes would be interesting to look more into for the Reception section, as well as themes when talking about gender and femininity/feminism. Holden's response to these criticisms, about the way Doro and morso Anyanwu subvert these gender roles, would also be good for the themes section.
"Sun Woman" or "Wild Seed?" How a Young Feminist Writer Found Alternatives to White Bourgeois narrative Models in the Early Novels of Octavia Butler, by L. Timmel Duchamp[edit]
  • Also published in 2013
  • Duchamp praises Butler's writing style and cites her influence on sf. Starts by mentioning Sam Delany's advice on writing (Delany was a mentor of Butler's). Delany mentioned absorbing writing models, not copying them but fully knowing them so you can write them subconsciously.
  • Duchamp points out how much harder that can be if you mainly have white men in the existing canon. You don't want to write something that speaks to that experience instead of something more your own, but consciously doing something different for the sake of it would just sound forced. (Relates to Butler's bio about struggling to find her voice as a black woman sf writer.)
  • Duchamp discusses how sf helps enable a writer to tackle newer ideas and social commentary without a preachy, forced feeling.
  • Duchamp succeeds with a sf novel, and she later realizes that the model she'd absorbed was Wild Seed. It works as a model because 1) as a sf novel it can avoid an annoying overt message, 2) Doro and Anyanwu's conflict works on many different levels, not just about the individuals but about two different worldviews and it speaks to feminist theory, and 3) Anyanwu ends up negotiating with her oppressor instead of emerging a victor in a struggle for freedom. In other feminist novels at the time, the battles were won: including at times in a "win" where the woman committed suicide.
  • When Duchamp first read it, she considered Wild Seed to be essentialist and Second Wave Feminism. Context: Third Wave Feminism emerging, interlocking oppression
  • Everything Butler writes has subtext and many ways to analyze/look deeper, and a lot of context to understand the characters' pov and decisions they make.
  • Butler's refusal to write heroines that can triumph ultimately makes the stories more complex and avoids the trap of following the (white) model.

Quote # 1: "The issue of generation is an index of their conflict. Both Doro and Anyanwu value generation, but generation means something entirely different to each of them. Within himself, Doro conflates the roles of father, master, and owner; he considers "his people" to be his children, slaves, and property. He insists that he has given "his children" their lives and thus has a right to take them when he wishes (202). Anyanwu scoffs at him when he casually refers to having created a man: "Did you create him, then? From what? Mounds of clay?" (123). Although Doro can only use others' bodies, he sees himself as physically reproducing by way of breeding his stock, reinforcing his conflation of the roles of father, master, and owner. As he tells Anyanwu, "I have lived for thirty-seven hundred years and fathered thousands of children. I have become a woman and borne children" (58). Throughout the novel, the narrative opposes Anyanwu's notions of parenting to Doro's constant claim to be father, owner, and master of those he claims to have created, as much by showing her actions and the power of her love as through her verbal opposition to Doro. He believes that childbearing makes women weak and vulnerable to domination (27); Anyanwu sees it as the source of great power and pleasure."

  • The talk of generation, motherhood, and fatherhood, is a big theme in the novel that not as many articles have explored beyond the concept of breeding and gender empowerment. This quote could be very powerful and work well when talking about themes.

Quote # 2: "Doro constantly asserts his sovereignty as an individual and is certain that childbearing weakens women because it does not allow them to enjoy total individual sovereignty. Anyanwu, in contrast, sees her world as a plurality of relations and interdependence. Her position as a black woman in antebellum America, for instance, is complicated by her power to shapeshift, a gift which allows her to pass as a white male when she wishes. In a sense, her shapeshifting emblematizes the fluidity of her identity, though it's important to note that she never regards the transformation of her identity as a means of overcoming oppression: for her, neither blackness nor femaleness is inherendy inferior and thus passing, while sometimes expedient, offers no solution. If maternity and plurality make her "weak" as Doro believes, it's a weakness she is not only happy to live with but that she pities him the lack o£."

  • This could also go to themes, in exploring the race and gender dynamics, as well as contradicting the criticism Holden brought up about the stereotypical gender roles Doro and Anyanwu represent in some ways. The quote shows how those are countered, and the way Butler talks about power and oppression in Wild Seed.

Quote # 3: "For Butler, the feminist story isn't an all-or-nothing struggle; it isn't simply about overthrowing patr1archy. Its about understanding how oppression works in all its complexity and finding ways to negotiate with what can't in the particular situation be changed."

  • The state of feminist sf in the 60s and 70s has been brought up several times at this point, so it should definitely have some place in the Wikipedia article. This quote does a good job of contextualizing Butler's work and particularly Anyanwu's decision to not commit suicide, which would also be considered a victory going by other feminist novels of the time.

Research Assignment # 5[edit]

"Octavia Butler's Uncanny Women: Structure and Characters in The Patternist Series", by Briana Whiteside[edit]
  • Contrast to stereotypical black women as portrayed in other media/culture: Jezebel (whore), Sapphire (angry black woman), mammy (motherly, happy to serve)
  • Anyanwu's powers are much stronger than what other black women in sf have - instead of more metaphorical, she is god-like and doesn't have to rely on other people or their powers to fuel her own.
  • However, the characters' powers don't allow them to escape concerns like slavery, disease, & death of old age.
  • Uncanny women stems partly from the science fiction narrative.
  • Butler's work helps blend the categories of "science-fiction" and "African American literature", instead of them being considered mutually exclusive.
  • Overall not a very good source. Long, repetitive and not a ton of new info better stated elsewhere.

Quote # 1: "At a time when there were hardly any black women lead characters in sci-fi, the presence and powers of Butler’s uncanny protagonists thus constituted a refreshing anomaly. They are like the spiritual healers that are presented in African American literature, but they can also internally heal themselves and others, which are abilities that other healers do not have."

  • This contrast can provide context for Butler's Wild Seed and can go to Reception, or simply a theme about the way black women are presented, or specifically the powers/spirituality.

Quote # 2: " Butler’s texts do not relegate themselves as easily to the realm of the fantastic as we might suspect. The incorporation of realistic affairs in America such as human breeding, incest-rial rape, as well as stealing of identity are not common themes of sci-fi as they are in African American literature."

  • This could make an interesting line or section on the Wikipedia article, since Wild Seed is a book where people argue about the genre it falls into.

Wild Seed Chapters 1-4[edit]

Wild Seed introduces Doro, a man who is able to live forever by taking on the forms of people he kills and using their bodies as hosts. He finds himself drawn to Anyanwu, who has only lived one life, but whose lifespan far outnumbers a normal human's. Her true form is a young woman, but she ages herself so she can live with her family for years without raising suspicion. Doro convinces her to leave with him, where she can be among the "seed" he has collected -- a name he uses for people he deems valuable. He acts like their god, and breeds them to produce the best genetic results. Doro and Anyanwu travel to a slave trade port, where they discover that a grandson of Anyanwu's, Okoye, has been captured. Doro buys him, and on the ship, he also claims ownership of a distant relative of Anyanwu's, Udenkwo, even though she is a free woman. Also on the boat is Isaac, a favorite son of Doro's, who finds himself attracted to Anyanwu. Doro plans to impregnate her himself, but also wants to share her with Isaac her in the hope of seeing what abilities their children might have.

Wild Seed Chapters 5-6[edit]

One night on the ship, there is a terrible storm, and Anyanwu witnesses Isaac's powers for the first time as he steers them to safety. Afterwards, he is drained, and another son of Doro's, Lale, brings him to Anyanwu's cabin. Lale uses his abilities to get inside Anyanwu's mind and try to get her to agree to mating with Isaac, and then Lale himself. She fights him off, and transforms into a leopard and kills him. Although Doro accepts Lale's death as an inevitability, he becomes disturbed by Anyanwu's strength. While she is in an animal form, he cannot feel her in his mind, and therefore could not kill her. Once they reach Doro's village, he tells Anyanwu that she has to marry Isaac for breeding purposes. Anyanwu is horrified, because she considers Doro her husband and to marry his son would be an abomination. He threatens her, saying he will kill her and go back for her children in Africa. But it's Isaac that convinces her to marry him, saying that as someone who is possibly immortal, she is strong enough to eventually appeal to what better nature Doro has left and change things for the better.

Wild Seed Chapters 7-10[edit]

This section of the book begins with a time-jump of fifty years. Isaac is kept alive by Anyanwu's healing influence, and they have come to love each other, having had many children together. So have Doro and Anyanwu, although Anyanwu's hatred and resentment of Doro has only grown over the years. Doro is brought back to the settlement because he senses that a daughter of Anyanwu's, Nweke, is going through her transition as she comes into her powers. Nweke is considered Doro's daughter, even though he took the body of her father after Nweke was conceived. Doro has sex with her, something he has avoided with Anyanwu's children in the past out a desire to not make her too uncomfortable. But he's grown tired of her behavior in the face of what he considers his leniency. Doro also believes Nweke's abilities could be strong enough for her to essentially replace Anyanwu, allowing him to finally kill her. Isaac cautions against this, saying that Doro still doesn't appreciate the role Anyanwu could play in his life. But Nweke's transition goes horribly wrong. Her mind snaps, and in her madness she severely injures Isaac and Anywanu. In pain, Isaac accidentally kills Nweke, and then dies with Anyanwu unable to heal him. Anyanwu, in grief and in fear that Doro would immediately kill her, flees the settlement, taking on animal forms. She plans to run from Doro forever if necessary.

Wild Seed Chapters 11-Epilogue[edit]

Around 100 years after Anyanwu ran, Doro is able to track her down to a plantation in Louisiana, where she runs a community for people with special abilities. It differs from Doro's seed farms in that she is there to help and heal the people, letting them do what they want as long as they don't harm each other, and expelling people from the community as a last resort instead of killing them. When Doro sees her again, he's come to appreciate her permanency in his life, and no longer plans to kill her. But he still wants her obedience, and brings a man, Joseph, to the community to marry and breed with Anyanwu's daughter Margaret. Joseph doesn't fit in with the community, and one day it is discovered that he tried to rape Anyanwu's youngest daughter, Helen, using an ability to control people's bodies and actions. Anyanwu's son, Stephen, was able to prevent it in time, and beat Joseph severely. In retaliation, that night Joseph uses his ability to make Stephen walk off the roof, killing him in a way that could look like an accident or suicide. He then attempts to do the same thing to Helen, but Anyanwu witnesses this and catches her. She is then forced to kill Joseph. After it comes out that Margaret knew when Joseph went through his transition, and had kept it a secret at his request, Margaret commits suicide. Anyanwu is so grieved by the loss of two of her young children so close together that Luisa, an old woman in the community, advises her to take on an animal form for a while and return to the sea, which has revitalized her in the past.

Anyanwu leaves for a month, and when she returns it's to find Doro there again, and Luisa dead of old age. Anyanwu is mentally and emotionally exhausted by losing so many people close to her, and of the prospect of it happening over and over again as she lives for hundreds or thousands more years. Doro uses her weakness as an opportunity to initiate a kind of soul bonding - the same sort of connection he makes with those he kills, but in a way that doesn't harm anyone as long as Doro doesn't lose control and consume them. In her normal state, Anyanwu would automatically fight back and Doro would instinctively kill her. Doro has experienced this connection a few times before, but never before has it been such a mutually pleasurable experience. They again become lovers, but the fragile peace is shattered when Doro is forced to discard his current body. He has no way of avoiding this, but Anyanwu is struck again by his casual disregard of human life when he takes the body of a woman he had three children with. She can't take the idea of someone so inhumane being the only constant in her life. Anyanwu plans to commit suicide, and Doro is furious, both at her decision and at how devastated he feels at the idea of losing her. The night she is going to kill herself, he tries to talk her out of it, eventually crying and begging her not to leave him alone. She doesn't do it, and after that night, both of them make compromises. Doro no longer kills as carelessly, and not from his people that he should be protecting. He also stops using her for breeding; she helps him in his quest to try and find more promising seeds, but is more of an ally and partner than his slave.

Orson Scott Card on Butler's craft in Wild Seed[edit]

Orson Scott Card uses Wild Seed as an example of how to write science fiction/fantasy. He explores some of the techniques Butler uses, and how they might be received by experienced science fiction readers vs. non-science fiction readers. He praises the amount of exposition Butler gives in her opening paragraphs and even opening sentence as giving a lot of information in an organic way without overwhelming the reader. He breaks this down into sections: first, Naming. Butler names the protagonist, Doro, in the opening line, and mentions "the woman" who will become a dual protagonist, but not by name. This is both so the reader isn't given too much information at once, and because Doro doesn't know her name yet. Then, he tackles Abeyance and Implication, where new terms and ideas are introduced and not immediately explained, but the reader can pick up on hints about the characters and world. Literalism is something writers and readers have to be wary of - in sci-fi/fantasy, metaphors used early in the story can be confusing because in these genres, they could also work just as well as literal interpretations. This isn't a pitfall Card criticizes Butler for falling into, however. He does credit her with Piquing our interest right away, getting the reader interested with the unique term of "seed village" and the mystery of Doro and the woman. Most importantly, he cautions writers to follow through on the promises they make early on. Does Doro's awareness of the woman and the concept of a seed village not only come up again, but make up a huge part of the themes/plot of the book? They do, and that's part of what makes Butler's work so good.

Overall, Card considers the beginning of Wild Seed to be a workshop in exposition. Information about Doro and Anyanwu's characters is revealed very quickly, but not in a way that stops or compromises the action. Both of their abilities, as well as their differing attitudes towards human life and where they fit in the world, is conveyed to the reader as Doro comes across the destroyed seed village and travels to find a mysterious presence he senses, while Anyanwu senses the presence of a stranger (Doro) and wonders if she will have to kill him in self-defense. Card describes Butler's technique as following Event Story structure, where Butler hits the ground running in accomplishing what she wants to with the book, beginning with Anyanwu and Doro meeting as quickly as possible. Card considers Butler to be a master at exposition, and an example all aspiring writers should follow.

Citation Practice[edit]

Octavia Butler was shy as a child. [1] [2] [3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Butler, Octavia, E. "Positive Obsession." Bloodchild and Other Stories. New York: Seven Stories, 2005.
  2. ^ John Clute. "Butler, Octavia E". The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction edited by John Clute, David Langford, Peter Nicholls and Graham Sleight. London: Gollancz, updated 16 September 2015. Web. Accessed 21 September 2015. <http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/butler_octavia>.
  3. ^ Butler, O.E. "Birth Of A Writer." Essence (Essence) 20.1 (1989): 74. Academic Search Complete. Web. 21 Sept. 2015.