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| ]==[]===© • Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Darlington
Posts: 5,577
| Heinlein old fashioned and sexist? There's a discussion about Heinlein on another forum,and they are of the general impression that he is old fashioned, dated, boring and sexist! Now i've only read a few,Stranger,Puppet Masters,Job,The Cat Who Walks Thru Walls and Waldo Magic Inc. is about it, but i can't detect such in his books. I've read in my encyclopedia that Starship Troopers is the book that alienated him from his fans but i've yet to read it. Any thoughts? |
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| resident pedantissimo | Re: Heinlein old fashioned and sexist? Old fashioned? Almost certainly. Remembering when he was born (and where – not the most progressive region on the planet) it's normal that some of his views be coloured by this; as mine have the same problem, I find it difficult to judge. Writing clear, grammatical text and tending to over explain a bit? That's mainly in his juveniles, and he was explaining for kids who knew nothing about satellites, orbits… a whole spectrum of things modern children have grown up with. Sexist? He believed that men and women had different strengths and weaknesses. This view is perhaps unfashionable, as are his views on breeding the population up until the land can't support them all, and are forced to move on. Still, it is an opinion which isn't dead even now, and he's certainly not in the "women as inferior beings" camp of many sword and sorcery fantasies. And, unlike many of his contemporaries in Science Fiction, he had female characters (not just romantic interest) from very early on, when it was assumed to be a "male reservation". For me, after "Stranger" he tended to ramble a bit, and could have done with editing down a bit, possibly not as tight as his earlier work, but (particularly "Time enough for love" and "To sail beyond the sunset") taking out some of the bits irrelevant to the main tale. But do read him; he was extremely influential in defining the genre. |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 13,183
| Re: Heinlein old fashioned and sexist? And I'd argue that even those later books, though he took a different direction with structure and much of what he was aiming at, are often well worth reading, though it's a considerable shift to one used to his older material. (I have a rather high regard for both, by the way....) |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Sweden
Posts: 7,985
| Re: Heinlein old fashioned and sexist? I think its the curse of bieng from the time he was and unlike other SF of those times as chris said with his female characters being more than just romantic interest. I still dont understand why modern fans dont applaud him for having female characters that wasnt only "woe me,save me"...... Too much ignorance in the way of enjoying one of the boldest and best SF writers there has been. |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| Scottish Roman Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: Perth and Kinross
Posts: 3,811
| Re: Heinlein old fashioned and sexist? Yes, and ? He's definitely old-fashioned, sexist in modern terms and his pontificating can get very boring at times. He's still a bl**dy good story-teller for all that. |
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| | #7 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Sweden
Posts: 7,985
| Re: Heinlein old fashioned and sexist? Quote:
Heck in the future we will be called old fashioned | |
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| | #8 (permalink) | |
| resident pedantissimo | Re: Heinlein old fashioned and sexist? In the present I can be called old fashioned, and not protest. Fashions move faster than people. RAH with SiaSL came closer to any other author of his period I can think of to leap-frogging fashion and waiting for it to catch up with him again. And yes, I read and enjoyed his later books, too; I just feel they would have been still better had he edited them as viciously as he did his earlier work. Quote:
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| | #9 (permalink) |
| ]==[]===© • Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Darlington
Posts: 5,577
| Re: Heinlein old fashioned and sexist? I can be old fashioned in some ways and yet progressive in others. I love me modern gadgets but also love old clunky cameras and if I could drive I'd love an old banger. |
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| Ubi amici, ibi opes... Join Date: Jul 2005 Location: Southampton
Posts: 7,890
| Re: Heinlein old fashioned and sexist? Quote:
Time enough... always reads to me as if he had lots of ideas for short and medium length stories that would not have been publishable individually, so he tacked them all together as episodes in the continuing story of Lazurus Long. Having said that, it contains the best, IMHO, story he ever wrote, bar none - The Tale of the Adopted Daughter, and for that story alone, it's well worth ploughing through the rest. | |
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| | #11 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Nov 2008 Location: Missouri
Posts: 60
| Re: Heinlein old fashioned and sexist? Old fashoned without a doubt, but whats wrong with that. The older I get the more I identify with some of the things he preached in his stories. One theme he had through a few of his stories was that in order to vote you first had to serve your country. There are times when I think that would not be a bad idea. At times I think many of us take things a little too for granted. And as far as his attitude about women, I don't think he felt they should be limited as much as he thought they should be protected. Something I also agree with. |
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| The Enigma of Steel | Re: Heinlein old fashioned and sexist? One of the things I got from his books was that a person should be responsible for their own actions. RAH showed both political conservatism and extreme liberalism at the same time. What a unique concept: pick and choose the best ideas from either or all branches of thought and be your own person. Be responsible for yourself but don't be afraid of change. That's way too old fashioed for me. |
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| | #13 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: May 2008 Location: Montana
Posts: 29
| Re: Heinlein old fashioned and sexist? Maybe the sexist rap is because it's so noticeable even kids get it. Podkayne is what drove it home for me. It was kind of like he just got exhausted writing from her perspective and had to finish up with her big brave little brother. While most of the time women are just missing and a kid can just fashion them in their imagination so there is no sexism. But with Podkayne it was kind of in your face and made me notice more in his other works. Having said that some of his YAs are among my favorites. I didn't like some of his adult reads so much but maybe I was just too young when I read them. I don't think I realized he had adults/YAs back then, I just picked up the author. Most go back and reread a few. |
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| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 13,183
| Re: Heinlein old fashioned and sexist? Quote:
Quote:
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| | #15 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Wisconsin
Posts: 390
| Re: Heinlein old fashioned and sexist? Quote:
I agree with Chris, I think if you look at most of the progressive authors of their respective times they are going to appear sexist, racist, or otherwise quite conservative by todays standards. That said, if you just look at the number of strong women Heinlein had throughout his works I think he is way ahead of the majority of the current crop of authors writing today. | |
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