Apr. 28th, 2015

juushika: A black and white photo of an ink pen (Writing)
Title: Ammonite
Author: Nicola Griffith
Published: New York: Ballantine Books, 2002 (1992)
Rating: 4 of 5
Page Count: 414
Total Page Count: 158,123
Text Number: 461
Read Because: reviewed by [profile] phoenixreads, ebook borrowed from the Multnomah County Library
Review: The planet Jeep's native population—themselves humans who immigrated centuries before—are all female. Anthropologist Marghe comes to explore their unique culture, and to field-test a vaccine against the virus which created it. Griffith takes an intriguing and problematic trope—a female-only culture—and works magic on it by seeing it not as gendered dystopia or male fantasy but as a human civilization, varied and complex. It's fantastic. Thematically (both as a trope inversion and as a study of human adaptability), Ammonite is at times heavy-handed. But Griffith's has a powerful and evocative voice, Marghe is well-defined with a meaningful arc, and Jeep is vibrant, difficult, intelligently constructed, thoughtfully explored. There's a pleasant balance of worldbuilding via daily survival, overarching themes, and plot, so, while Ammonite can be earnest to a fault, I thoroughly enjoyed it.

I only wish that Griffith had addressed the issue of gender identity. While it's almost a relief that sexual orientation is a non-issue, I was left wondering: What is the native population's concept of gender? (Does the presence of male flora and fauna and/or their genetic memories effect it?) How does it interact with the gender binary that offworlders (presumably) have? In such a carefully built and explored world, where the full breadth of female identity is such an obvious focus, ignoring the diversity of biological sex and social gender feels like an oversight.

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