She conducted research for the book in Maryland, and visited Mt. She also stated that she wanted to show that women like her mother, who did domestic work for white families in Pasadena, were not timid or cowardly but rather heroes in their own way. In Kindred Butler endeavors to show what slavery was like and what sort of resistance was possible. The well-known anecdote behind the book’s origins is that Butler, who was active in the Civil Rights and Black Power movements, began working on the book in college as a response to a young black man in the movement who criticized his ancestors for having a “slave mentality” through their “humility” and not doing enough to push for their freedom. It is famed for its insights into slavery, gender roles, trauma, American history, and more. It has been referred to as a work of speculative fiction or a neo-slave narrative as well. A genre-bending novel, it includes explorations time travel, antebellum slavery, and feminism, told in gripping and immediate prose. Butler also uses both of the neo-slave and science fiction genres for feminist purposes, featuring a strong female protagonist similar to those found in the works of Gayl Jones ( Corregidora) and Toni Cade Bambara ( The Salt Eaters).Kindred is science fiction writer Octavia Butler’s most famous work. Kindred is an important entry into the neo-slave narrative genre that reconstructs the lives of slaves from a modern historical perspective. Butler also includes elements of the slave narrative, with extensive research into the slave narratives she could find, especially those with a strong autobiographical component such as The Narrative of Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman’s accounts, and Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs. Many works written after Butler’s initial foray into African American science fiction are collected in Dark Matter: A Century of Speculative Fiction from the African Diaspora edited by Sheree Thomas. In moving through time and space, Butler works within the template of a fantastic travelogue pioneered by science fiction authors such as Jules Verne, Jonathan Swift, and others – yet Butler approaches it from a specifically racially conscious perspective. However, there is still a strong preference in certain regions of America for partners of the same race, with interracial couples accounting for only 5% of all marriages annually. Interracial marriage was not fully legal in all 50 states until 1967, only about a decade before Kevin and Dana married within the world of the novel. This explains why Dana would have no idea that her ancestry included white blood. The status of children matched the status of the mother, meaning that most mixed-race children were kept as slaves just like their black mothers, though some of the lightest-skinned children could run away and attempt to “pass” as white by hiding their racial identity. Very few white men legally recognized the mixed-race children that came from these relations, as Dana urges Rufus to do at the end of Kindred. Despite this, the public perception painted black men as predators of white women, and warned against diluting the “purity” of the white race through these couplings. From accounts of the time period, it seems to have been a matter of course for white male slave masters to sexually abuse their female slaves, and less likely for white women to engage in relationships with black men. Much of the novel deals with the effects of two interracial relationships, though one is a legal marriage and the other is an arrangement in which a master takes sexual advantage of his slave. Her papers and manuscripts are now housed in the Huntington Library. In 1999, Butler moved to Lake Forest Park, Washington, where she lived until her death. She is most famous for the Patternist Series, the Xenogenesis Trilogy, and the Parable Series, with Kindred representing her most significant departure from more clearly science fiction work. In 1995, Butler was the first science fiction author to receive the prestigious MacArthur Fellowship “Genius Grant” meant to sponsor brilliant work from the country’s leading artists. Butler has won numerous awards for her novels and short stories, including the Hugo for her short works Speech Sounds and Bloodchild and the Nebula Award for her book The Parable of the Talents. With the publication of the Patternist Series and Kindred in 1979, Butler was able to support herself on her writing alone. After graduating high school, Butler found many temporary jobs that allowed her to attend Pasadena City College at night and later write in the early mornings. A dreamy and introspective child, Butler found escape in books and writing. Butler grew up in the racial mix of Pasadena, experiencing segregation and discrimination first-hand as she watched her mother and female relatives withstand abuse as maids from their employers.
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