We live in worrying times. Fascism is on the rise across Europe and America, according to the consensus of many commentators. In this post, I will highlight SF that has speculated on the rise and activities of fascism. In a later blog post, I’ll discuss science fiction that has thought about ways to resist.

Science fiction in the 1930s had its fair share of authoritarian dictators. Upton Sinclair’s It Can’t Happen Here is a famous warning novel that feels all too relevant. In Sinclair’s vision, a populist demagogue takes power on the promise to halt immigration and make America great once more. But there is a lesser-known standout work that tried to warn the world of what was to come. Published under the alias Murray Constantine, Swastika Night (1937) projects a future in which the Nazis and Japanese won and have divided the world. Jews have been eradicated, Christians live in reservations, women are reduced to a voiceless and a near-invisible drudge caste, and the world is ruled by Teutonic knights. One aspect of the book that jumps out is the degree to which women have collaborated in their own oppression—a scenario that looked ridiculous to me on first read, but isn’t as funny in a world of “trad wives.”

Immediately after the Second World War, in the UK, people were trying to envisage a better future. Others were pushing back. In Marghanita Laski’s Tory Heaven; or, Thunder on the Right (1948), the ultra-right wing launch a coup and re-create their “natural order.” On a desert island, five people have constructed a meritocracy. When they are rescued, protagonist James Leigh-Smith (think Jacob Rees-Mogg) prays, “God, let it be as it might have been. Alter the clock, fix the election, do it any way you please, but let me see the England of all decent Conservatives’ dreams.” He finds himself in a country in which everyone is assigned to their correct social class, with the aristocracy and gentry given fixed incomes and told what to think, what to enjoy, who to marry, etc. It doesn’t end well. James discovers that while he has been given a place, it is conditional on his absolute support. He isn’t, as he thought, one of the rulers.

After the war, there were a slew of alternative history novels warning that “it could have happened here,” of which my favorites are Ward Moore’s Bring the Jubilee (1953) about a Confederate America, or Philip K. Dick’s Man in the High Castle (1962), one of the works from the 1961-1962 era being celebrated in Seattle. However, these books are consolatory in that it didn’t happen here. I’m more interested in texts that say, “If this goes on, this is where we are heading.”

Recent examples of warning novels include Octavia Butler’s Parable (or Earthseed) series, where the second book tracks the rise of right-wing fundamentalist Christians. In the television series Babylon 5, the space station becomes one of the holdouts against a fascist earth, but the series neatly ignores that the station is not a democracy. It is at best a benevolent military meritocracy. Lucy Ferris’s The Misconceiver (1997) is told through the voice of an underground abortionist in a world in which the right has rolled back all freedoms for women, gay people, and non-whites. Most recent warning books are focused on race and sexual freedoms, but some take up fundamental and systemic issues that warn of rising facism. Ken MacLeod’s Corporation Wars series (2016-17) envisages bitter war around the fundamental ideological differences between fascism and humanism, a future divided between those who see only themselves as truly human and those who still feel humanity is (or should be) structured around collectivity and the acknowledgement of others’ realities.

Since the 2016 U.S. election, and the extreme behaviour of the (many) British prime ministers in the past decade, fascism has felt ever more threatening in the Anglosphere. Lorraine Wilson’s This Is Our Undoing (2021) is set in a fractured and fascist Europe and explores the interrelationship between the personal and the political. In Marisa Crane’s I Keep My Exoskeleton To Myself (2023) and Chain-Gang All-Stars (2023) by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, the carceral state has found new ways to abuse and exploit the underclass. In The Disinformation War (2023), SJ Groenwegen takes on the disinformation that has infected the landscape of social media. Claire North’s Notes from the Burning Age (2021) explores the rise of authoritarian nationalism in a post-collapse future after a time of rebuilding and prosperity.

We have been warned. This time round we know what’s coming.

With thanks to Facebook friends for suggestions.

https://seattlein2025.org/2025/04/18/fantastic-fiction-fascism/

#Babylon5 #ClaireNorth #KenMacLeod #LorraineWilson #LucyFerris #MarghanitaLaski #MarisaCrane #MurrayConstantine #NanaKwameAdjeiBrendan #OctaviaButler #PhilipKDick #SJGroenwegen #UptonSinclair #WardMoon

Fantastic Fiction: Fascism

We live in worrying times. Fascism is on the rise across Europe and America, according to the consensus of many commentators. In this post, I will highlight SF that has speculated on the rise and activities of fascism. In a later blog post, I'll discuss science fiction that has thought about ways to resist.

Seattle Worldcon 2025

Fantastic Fiction: Fascism: We live in worrying times. Fascism is on the rise across Europe and America, according to the consensus of many commentators. In this post, I will highlight SF that has speculated on the rise and acti… (#Babylon5 #ClaireNorth #KenMacLeod #LorraineWilson #LucyFerris #MarghanitaLaski #MarisaCrane #MurrayConstantine #NanaKwameAdjeiBrendan #OctaviaButler #PhilipKDick #SJGroenwegen #UptonSinclair #WardMoon)

Full post: https://seattlein2025.org/2025/04/18/fantastic-fiction-fascism/

Fantastic Fiction: Fascism

We live in worrying times. Fascism is on the rise across Europe and America, according to the consensus of many commentators. In this post, I will highlight SF that has speculated on the rise and activities of fascism. In a later blog post, I'll discuss science fiction that has thought about ways to resist.

Seattle Worldcon 2025
#lechantdesdéesses #PénelopereinedIthaque #tome1 #clairenorth #lecture #roman #trilogie

C'est ma première lecture de mars et mon coup de coeur du mois.

À Ithaque, les rumeurs de la mort d'Ulysse, parti faire la guerre à Troie, vont bon train. Des prétendants au trône se présentent devant Pénelope mais aucun n'est assez puissant pour s'imposer. Ils attendent que Pénelope désigne celui qui accèdera au trône...

Premier roman d'une trilogie consacré à Ithaque, il donne toute sa place aux femmes. Dans un royaume où les hommes sont soient trop vieux soient trop jeunes, Ithaque paraît bien fragile. Mais c'est sans compter ses femmes, avec Pénelope à leur tête, qui n'ont pas le choix que de le défendre, que de se défendre mais tout en restant dans l'ombre (que penserait-on d'un royaume qui ne compte que sur ses femmes pour sa défense... ?).
Après avoir lu Clytemnestre, j'étais très curieuse de découvrir Pénelope sous une plume féministe. Et j'ai adoré. On y sent toute la volonté de la reine de protéger son peuple ainsi que son fils Télémaque, que les prétendants pourraient voir comme une menace. J'ai aussi beaucoup aimé que ce soit Hera qui nous raconte l'histoire. C'est une déesse que je n'appréciais pas du fait de la vision misogyne qu'on nous transmet mais, même si elle a toujours des défauts, on comprend mieux ce qu'elle a vécu et pourquoi elle a agi comme elle l'a fait.
Il y a des phrases qui sont des pépites. Elles sont parfois brutales mais elles sont remplies de vérité.
Je ne me suis pas encore jetée sur le deuxième tome car le troisième n'est pas encore sorti et que je ne veux pas trop attendre entre les deux autres tomes.

Now reading Fyneshade [2023] by Kate Griffin which is a pseudonym of Claire North [which also is a pseudonym, this time for her real name - but what shall I say] and this book's again a great inventurous, ridiculous and gritty one of hers <3

"I looked up meekly. "I will take my direction from you. After all it is you who employed me." [...] It was clear that the true meaning of my answer had evaded her. Both of us could defy orders."

#ClaireNorth #KateGriffin #bookstodon @bookstodon #Fyneshade

"I am Nobody.
I am Kepler.
I am Love.
I am You."

From Claire North's TOUCH [2015].

I just finished this book and like[d] it very much.

#Touch #ClaireNorth

I'm loving Claire North [have read THE FIRST 15 LIVES OF HARRY AUGUST, THE END OF THE DAY, and THE SUDDEN APPEARANCE OF HOPE] - and currently I'm reading TOUCH - its idea/storyline is a great one, a real recommendation!

https://app.thestorygraph.com/books/7976fd23-7b92-402f-8b2d-6d5099f0e089

#bookstodon @bookstodon @thestorygraph #rebcommendations #ClaireNorth

Touch by Claire North

He tried to take my life. Instead, I took his.  It was a long time ago. I remember it was dark, a...

I preordered the forthcoming Claire North novel Slow Gods.

🚀Space Opera!🚀

https://books.apple.com/gb/book/slow-gods/id6738302009

#SciFi #ClaireNorth

‎Slow Gods

‎Sci-Fi & Fantasy · 2025

Apple Books

Il y a quelques semaines, j'ai vu ici une demande (par @flomaraninchi ? Je n'arrive pas à retrouver le thread, désolé s'il y a confusion) de conseils d'autrices de SF. Une ou plusieurs personnes ont recommandé Claire North, que je ne connaissais pas.

Je viens de lire mon premier Claire North (La Maison des jeux T1: le serpent) et j'en ai encore la tête pleine d'intrigues vénitiennes, des émotions des personnages, le fantastique discret mais omniprésent de lamaison des jeux, sa manière de s'adresser au lecteur, etc. Bref, je viens de découvrir une autrice fabuleuse et :

• soit vous connaissez #ClaireNorth, et la recommander autour de vous ne peut que faire du bien ! (Et merci à ceux et celles d'entre vous qui le font déjà)
• soit vous ne la connaissez pas encore, comme moi hier: vous l'avez compris, je vous la recommande fortement. Même si vous n'aimez pas la SF mais n'êtes pas hostile à une touche de fantastique (au moins pour le T1 de la maison des jeux, seul livre que j'ai lu)

@NickEast The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August by Claire North.

#Books #ClaireNorth