A World Between

In what way does the author address gender issues in the novel, A World Between?

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During the 1970s science fiction discovered gender issues. Under the influence of the women's movement, novels were published featuring androgynous races, matriarchal societies, all-female worlds, and many other arrangements. Most of these were serious attempts to examine aspects of sex roles that formerly had been viewed, even in science fiction, as at least "natural" if not inevitable. The imaginary society might be a dystopia, a Utopia, or something in between, depending on the writer's own beliefs.

A World Between is Spinrad's entry in this fray. Many male science fiction writers picked up on the trend only indirectly, by putting female characters into formerly male occupations. Spinrad is one of the few to tackle the "gender wars" directly in a novel; it makes fascinating reading for this reason alone. However, in A World Between he has also accomplished several other things. He has created a high-tech world which is also a pleasant place to live — no mean feat when compared to the dangerous worlds of the cyberpunk novels. He has played with some plausible ideas for an alternate mixed economy within a democracy. Finally, he has imagined a society and planet held together by a net of electronic communication and shown how it could work.

Source(s)

A World Between, BookRags