Prof. Ian MacDonald publishes "'May the Guest Come': African Azimuths of Alien Planetfall" inLiterary Geographies

Congratulations to Prof. Ian MacDonald on publication of an essay, in Literary Geographies 8(2). The abstract:

As early as Lucians True Story (2nd Century CE) extraterrestrial encounters have regularly gestured toward colonialism with twentieth-century science fiction (sf) often figuring such contact on Earth in incursive terms of reverse colonialism (Wellss War of the Worlds, Heinleins The Puppet Masters, Wyndhams The Midwich Cuckoos, Clarkes Childhoods End). Entwined, however, with alien motivesthe whyare parallel colonial presumptions concerning the where of such encounters; aliens, surveying the planet, inevitably identify the U.S. or Europe as the pinnacles of civilization and the rightful representatives of the planet. As multiple sf critics have suggested, African disinterest with speculative fiction in twentieth century often derived from the genres frequent marginalization of the Global South; when non-Europeans appeared at all in pre- New Wave sf, it was often in the form of the aliens themselves. As part of the recent surge of formally sf African textswhich, while beginning in the 1980s and 1990s, has reached new and exciting levelsalternative considerations of alien contact have emerged. What does it mean to relocate the site of alien contact away from the colonial metropoles and does this temper the martial imagination? Focusing on Nnedi Okorafors Lagoon but incorporating the likes of Emmanuel Dongala, Neill Blomkamp, and Dilman Dila, this article considers the spatial and epistemological implications of African extraterrestrial first-contact narratives, highlighting the potential of the speculative to peripheralize Europe by centering Africans as planetary hosts.


MacDonald, Ian P. "'May the Guest Come': African Azimuths of Alien Planetfall,"Literary Geographies 8(2). 190-207.

Azimuth

image from file by TWCarlson; licensed under via Wikimedia Commons.