Positive Obsession
The Life and Times of Octavia E. Butler
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5.0 • 2 Ratings
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- $1.99
Publisher Description
A magnificent cultural biography that charts the life of one of our greatest writers, situating her alongside the key historical and social moments that shaped her work.
As the first Black woman to consistently write and publish in the field of science fiction, Octavia Butler was a trailblazer. With her deft pen, she created stories speculating the devolution of the American empire, using it as an apt metaphor for the best and worst of humanity—our innovation and ingenuity, our naked greed and ambition, our propensity for violence and hierarchy. Her fiction charts the rise and fall of the American project—the nation’s transformation from a provincial backwater to a capitalist juggernaut—made possible by chattel slavery—to a bloated imperialist superpower on the verge of implosion.
In this outstanding work, Susana M. Morris places Butler’s story firmly within the cultural, social, and historical context that shaped her life: the Civil Rights Movement, Black Power, women’s liberation, queer rights, Reaganomics. Morris reveals how these influences profoundly impacted Butler’s personal and intellectual trajectory and shaped the ideas central to her writing. Her cautionary tales warn us about succumbing to fascism, gender-based violence, and climate chaos while offering alternate paradigms to religion, family, and understanding our relationships to ourselves. Butler envisioned futures with Black women at the center, raising our awareness of how those who are often dismissed have the knowledge to shift the landscape of our world. But her characters are no magical martyrs, they are tough, flawed, intelligent, and complicated, a reflection of Butler’s stories.
Morris explains what drove Butler: She wrote because she felt she must. “Who was I anyway? Why should anyone pay attention to what I had to say? Did I have anything to say? I was writing science fiction and fantasy, for God’s sake. At that time nearly all professional science-fiction writers were white men. As much as I loved science fiction and fantasy, what was I doing? Well, whatever it was, I couldn’t stop. Positive obsession is about not being able to stop just because you’re afraid and full of doubts. Positive obsession is dangerous. It’s about not being able to stop at all.”
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Cultural critic Morris (Close Kin and Distant Relatives) examines in this unique biography the "personal struggles, historical context, and creative obsessions" behind the work of Octavia Butler (1947–2006). Morris notes that Butler's prolific oeuvre invites readers to imagine the future in a way that prioritizes seeking truth and rejecting tyranny, making use of "positive obsession," a term Butler coined to describe her desire to write. Morris demonstrates how Butler spoke to America's horrors, noting that her novels "pay close attention to the workings of white supremacy, patriarchy, and capitalism to spin a horrifying near future." In 1993's Parable of the Sower, set in 2024, Butler reflected on Reagan's presidential run and in doing so, foresaw Donald Trump's campaign pledge to "make America great again." As an "ardent surveyor of history," Butler shed light on the antebellum South in her 1979 novel Kindred, which was inspired by a classmate of Butler's who believed their enslaved ancestors to be cowards. Morris powerfully frames Butler's work and career through her politics and personal struggles, including the way poverty "threatened to crush her spirit." The result is a moving study of the life and creative pursuits of a literary pioneer.