Towards a New Science Fiction

In 2018, I was getting off BART in San Francisco, wearing a 3M Professional Multi-Purpose Respirator, waiting to be picked up in a semi-autonomous self-driving Tesla, about to participate in Autopiloto, a 24 hour, mobile radio project by Radioee, about critical responses to all things automated. I was invited to discuss my work researching crude oil and mysticism in the mid 1800s. Breathing heavily through my filtered mask, I stood at the Glen Park Bart stop waiting to be picked up by the self-driving vehicle transmitting moving electromagnetic radio waves, watching troves of passengers exit the station wearing respirators and dust masks to escape the toxic atmosphere created by the dense smoke of numerous California wildfires, it occurred to me we earth-dwellers must collectively update our post-apocalyptic narratives. They have arrived (again, for many). They are no longer fiction.

I tried to write this before. About 2 years ago, while I was in the throes of watching every episode of Star Trek, in order. Eventually I did it; more than 700 50 minute episodes. It took me about 1.5 years, which averages to more than an episode a day. I finished on a flight from Kampala, Uganda to San Diego, CA, after spending nearly a year living in Ghana, Ethiopia, and Uganda. On my way to Tamale, in northern Ghana—starting with the flight there—where I lived for some time, I read Nnedi Okorafor’s Binti novella series, Nigerian sci-fi, feminist sci-fi. It was by no means my first step into Afrofuturism or speculative feminism and the many strains of SF (string figures, speculative fabulations, scientific facts), as Donna Haraway calls them. Octavia Butler has transformed my sense of what literature, story-telling, and world-making can be. Similarly, I’ve been a fan of the mysterious Detroit techno group, Drexciya, for a long time. In the late 80s and early 90s, the cult producers began the mythology that Drexciya is a lost Atlantis civilization deep under the ocean consisting of pregnant slaves who were thrown overboard during the middle passage. All their music advanced this narrative. Before them, in the 1970s, Laaraji, who is a proponent of radical laughter, advanced an ambient, meditative cosmic philosophy. Of course, Sun Ra, too, and his Arkestra, were sent to earth to communicate the cosmic vibrations of sound.

It is through the Sun Ra compound that one of my favorite quotes comes into existence: “communities that have agency are capable of forming their own philosophical structures,” attributed to British saxophonist Shabaka Hutchings. A wonderful notion indeed and, I think, the important launch pad for why speculative fiction is so important. Samuel “Chip” Delaney is an early progener of queer black science fiction, someone who certainly mobilized new philosophical concepts. I’m particularly fond of his work Nova because we all—earth beings—are sun worshipers after all. I feel this way in part because it links me to my bi-racial Mexican heritage and the ancestry of that lineage. The Aztec were very much children of the sun.

I’ve spent some time reading Latin American origin stories, the Mayan Popul Vuh, for instance. Specifically to see how it, in comparison to other origin texts like the Bible and the Koran, reference crude oil. In these early texts, different conceptualizations of the black corpse of the sun—as Reza Negarestani describes oil in his foundational speculative theory text, Cyclonopedia—provide different genealogies to the substance that the modern world is shaped with in nearly every aspect of life.

But, claiming origin stories as speculative fiction is not without stakes. On the one hand, I think it is a constructive move to bring these texts into literature and away from the risks of zealous creationism. On the other hand, to indoctrinate texts like the Popul Vuh into a western literary discourse is not an emancipatory practice of self-determination—communities with agency are capable of forming their own philosophical structures. Indeed, more and more western scholars are looking critically at the theology of enlightenment. In the Facing Gaia lectures, famed sociologist Bruno Latour asks, “What does it mean for people to measure, to represent, and compose the shape of the earth to which they are bound?” He continues in categorical terms:  

Earth: understood as a historical conception or geohistorical adventure. Gaia: from James Lovelock, the most secular historical figure science has studied, not unified but composed—not nature… a political theology of nature. Nature-known, by the sciences… in epistemological mode nature defined by full attributes of exteriority, unity, inanimate agency, and undisputability…

Others too have begun to view the rationalist science of enlightenment as a theological output. In The Birth of Energy, Cara New Daggett looks at the history of the science of energy as naturecultural, the inseparable entanglement of nature and culture.

This is not particularly new. Many artists, writers, and critical theorists have challenged the anthropocentrism of Western conceptualizations of the cosmos. I am particularly interested in Karen Barad’s critique of what they call the metaphysics of individualism which challenges the conception of representationalism, in favor of practices, doings, becomings, and performativity. In this view, there are no essential characteristics of any “thing”, but rather things become with/through matter’s ongoing differentiation of the world, where matter is always already intra-actively co-constituted by material-discursive conditions. Barad calls this agential realism. There is density to this idea, that I will willfully sidestep for the purposes of this writing, but it is a start, I think, to allow for the proposal of many worlds, which numerous anthropologists (Marisol de La Cedena, Mario Blser, Eduardo Viveiros de Castro, etc.) have argued for, to coexist simultaneously. These are worlds in which Isabel Stengers’ conception of cosmopolitics as a matter of concern can prosper: “gathering together for interests in common which are not the same interests.”

Really, though, I want to focus not on the theorists making these arguments, but the work that new speculative storytelling can do. Metaphors do not rule our world per se, but many people, from Friedrich Nietzsche to George Lakoff have warned against the risk of relying on language too much to shape worlds. Before I get away from theorists though, I’ll let Haraway’s thoughts overemphasize the point, because she does it so damn well:

Even rendered in an American English-language text like this one, Naga, Gaia, Tangaroa, Medusa, Spider Woman, and all their kin are some of the many thousand names proper to a vein of SF that Lovecraft could not have imagined or embraced—namely, the webs of speculative fabulation, speculative feminism, science fiction, and scientific fact. It matters which stories tell stories, which concepts think concepts. Mathematically, visually, and narratively, it matters which figures figure figures, which systems systematize systems (Haraway, 2016, 101).

So, how is contemporary science fiction doing? What figures is it figuring? Visually, in the current so-called golden age of television, there ought to be a surplus of conceptually rich sci-fi, magical realism, indigenous futurism, and other worlding narratives. There are some, see Skawennati and the aforementioned Okorafur. But far more frequent are the utterly banal (at best) and downright problematic (at worst) rehashing of the current techno-capitalist values. Most current sci-fi does not even represent the best version of the nonetheless still ossified faith that technology alone will “save” humanity: left accelerationism. Instead, series after series reproduces the most boring tropes of a new technological arms race, surveillance capitalism, and what Jenny Odell calls the attention economy. Robot camera choreography does not matter if it is not contributing to the conceptual realization of the work. Technological improvements in CGI, camera speed, rigs, etc. can be noteworthy accomplishments, but they do not, on their own, constitute meaningful developments of anything specifically, or help mobilize new conditions for thinking.

Good sci-fi, which I think is more often found in speculative fiction, creates alternative worlds in which new concepts or relations can be explored seriously. It does not graft the benign values of the present into future conditions. Good SF reminds us that communities that have agency are capable of forming their own philosophical structures and provides frameworks for conceptualizing those concepts. The worlds we live with/in now, in the present, are also conditions of standardization, governed by the philosophical concepts of the enlightenment: individualism, anthropocentrism, extractive capitalism. The list is not finite. Nor is the potential otherwise, precisely the reward of SF.

Amidst the contemporary moment, which, dare I say, was prophesized by Octavia Butler in her Parable Series to a frightening degree of accuracy, in which fragmentation, alienation, ignorance, extremism, and environmental catastrophe are enveloping all that there is, we earth beings need better storytellers. Not the Cli-Fi genre, which commodifies disaster capitalism. We don’t need stories for the future, we need stories for the present. Stories that provide new frameworks for how to create new concepts. Stories that update the idea of apocalypse to the slow death of ecosystems, identities, and the ongoing destruction of many different worlds: island dwellers, indigenous populations, species-beings, glacial ice, salmon, and more. These worlds already experience the apocalypse that we moderns—as Latour would say—are just catching up to. We need stories that challenge concepts of “we” and “us” and “I” in meaningful ways and practical responses to the spacetime disciplining that has colonized life.

Towards Cosmic Multi-species Relations and why "My Octopus Teacher" is Not Good Enough.

The Oscar for Best Documentary that My Octopus Teacher won illustrates just how far Western modern perceptions of nature still have to go. On the surface, this film presents a triumphant, if not unexpected, kinship between two unlikely species: land-dwelling “man” and aquatic octopus.

It is well documented that octopuses are exceptionally intelligent beings and the story of encounters between one depressed Afrikaner man and the therapeutic ocean provides an intimate portrait of two creatures somewhat out of their element (so to speak). Filmmaker Craig Foster has amazing lungs and stamina; and the submerged salty world he cinematically captures is seductive. And yet, this is just the point: the film illustrates how easily humans are convinced of their own representation of things when presented with wonderment and awe for the sublime unknown. I am underwhelmed that my fellow humans are so easily guided into this perspective. I too spend significant time in a cold ocean and value world-building with multi-species kinfolk.

I’d like to turn to perhaps the most important narrative device within the documentary: the use of the octopus’s attack and subsequent loss of limbs which functions as both a catalyst for different sub narratives and the development of tension in the film. Despite the prevailing message that Foster and the octopus are friends offering mutual support, this is mostly a glamorous proposition by a depressed man. The relationship certainly seems to be one-directional. Is it not the goal of any meaningful bond to offer oneself wholly to the other? In fact, he is of the shittiest of friends. Imagine that you are coerced out of your safe home because a strange visitor who you partially trust arrives at your doorstep and as a result you are attacked by some predator, only to see your friend disappear under the embarrassing credo of human nonintervention into so-called nature? As though humans are not organic earthly entities; as though all the gallivanting around in the octopus's backyard, filming her, touching her, is nonintervention; as though the very premise of the Anthropocene, a geologic epoch in which humanity has irrecoverably influenced the entire earth system, however incomplete of an idea, is not a clear bellwether of the entangled conditions of nature and culture. Foster is more than happy to intervene when it serves his interest of a pretty shot—the worst kind of documentary work.

It is an under-examined component of the film that the very first sequence, this otherwise remarkable and potentially queer adornment that the octopus uses as a strategy to hide from predators, may in part also have been caused due to the filmmaker’s aloof presence in the ocean at that time. Instead of utilizing screen time to reflect on this, the filmmaker ogles at the beauty and awe that another entity besides humans utilizes its environment in a technical and aesthetic way. Most disappointingly, this observation, however uncritical, is deployed narratively as a form of poetics of reflection and recuperation for Foster. In other words, the representation of the octopus and of their friendship is refashioned for the purpose of self-improvement of the filmmaker. What I learn from this film is that I can inhabit other creature’s homes and risk their lives if it gives me peace of mind.

What feels particularly lacking in the Academy’s choice is that there is so much interesting writing, filmmaking, and art about human/nature entanglements right now. The high priestess of speculative fiction and Afrofuturism, Octavia Butler, is finally beginning to receive the popular attention she has deserved. Her Xenogenesis Trilogy offers a rich and nuanced interpretation of humanity, technology, and life, through the lens of trauma, slavery, multi-species kinship, and space travel. In the San Francisco Bay Area, Jenny Odell, artist and author of How To Do Nothing, has been thinking with birds for some time; Elisabeth Nicula’s similar kinship with her scrub jay friend, whom she nicknamed Frank, was a multi-year relationship documented through more than 80,000 photographs. Ecosexuals Beth Stephens and Annie Sprinkles, long-time queer environmental artists and activists, have actualized a performative route for making love with the earth. They readily admit the anthropocentrizing of the Earth that their work does. But, the point is they utilize this as a strategy to engage a complex ethics of shared cohabitation and love for this planet. All of these artists actively cultivate the perspective that representations of nature are not just environmental issues, but are fundamentally entrenched in racial, colonial, and gendered power relationships. Feminist philosopher Donna Haraway, author of the Companion Species Manifesto has been thinking with other kinfolk for some time. In her 2016 book, Staying With The Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene she says, “It matters which stories tell stories, which concepts think concepts. Mathematically, visually, and narratively, it matters which figures figure figures, which systems systematize systems” (Haraway 2016, 101).

Instead of the kind of transformative meditation on Western human’s sense of entitlement to define what nature is, the film offers the portrait of a white guy who feels bad and seeks a multi-species entity to displace emotional labor on to (even if the emotional labor is purely of the representational sort). This film could have done some deep work in the water to re-orient how a multi-species ethics of care and maintenance might look—an octopus ethics—or the Oscar’s could have chosen a documentarian who is actually doing this, such as Ursula Biemann, among others.

Unfortunately, My Octopus Teacher only momentarily disrupts the all too common perception that humans are the center of all things. Once the distraction of our own amazement that an organism other than humans might actually have the capacity for culture, friendship, and emotions subsides, the film quickly reminds us that prevailing modern human values will quickly abandon planetary kin the moment it’s post as rulers of the cosmos is challenged.

With the Academy deeming this film the best in its class, it’s so crucial that this argument is taken up to continue reminding the Western human inhabitants of this rare Earth that multi-species relationships and stewardship of the planet must come from the perspective that humanity does not define the value of other entities.