A tired exhausted but still strong reminder:
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A tired exhausted but still strong reminder:
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A tired exhausted but still strong reminder:
…also, NOT EVERYTHING I WRITE is africanfuturist, *gasp*. There’s also africanjujuism. And some other things.
I only defined these two categories because I felt things needed to be complicated. If I said nothing, alllll speculative fiction by black people would have clumped under one category that had very specific origins (that were USA-centered, rooted).
It’s only AFTER I did this that you got others more adamantly coining new terms for black spec fic categories.
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undefined Oblomov ha condiviso questa discussione
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…also, NOT EVERYTHING I WRITE is africanfuturist, *gasp*. There’s also africanjujuism. And some other things.
I only defined these two categories because I felt things needed to be complicated. If I said nothing, alllll speculative fiction by black people would have clumped under one category that had very specific origins (that were USA-centered, rooted).
It’s only AFTER I did this that you got others more adamantly coining new terms for black spec fic categories.
if I wanted to know more about africanjujuism, what could I read as example of it? And what would I expect?
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if I wanted to know more about africanjujuism, what could I read as example of it? And what would I expect?
@oblomov I defined the term briefly in this essay: http://nnedi.blogspot.com/2019/10/africanfuturism-defined.html?m=1
Honestly, I’m not into writing too much about categories. I kinda hate all this categorizing. It’s limiting and reductive. In this case, I needed to play the categories game because the term “afrofuturism” was engulfing everything in a damaging way.
My Nsibidi Scripts series is a prime example of africanjujuism, a subcategory of fantasy. What would you expect? That’s not for me to answer.
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@oblomov I defined the term briefly in this essay: http://nnedi.blogspot.com/2019/10/africanfuturism-defined.html?m=1
Honestly, I’m not into writing too much about categories. I kinda hate all this categorizing. It’s limiting and reductive. In this case, I needed to play the categories game because the term “afrofuturism” was engulfing everything in a damaging way.
My Nsibidi Scripts series is a prime example of africanjujuism, a subcategory of fantasy. What would you expect? That’s not for me to answer.
@nnedi thank you very much, that blog post was quite enlightening. And thanks for the recommendation, I'll look into it.