To mark the 250th anniversary of the United States, we鈥檙e cataloging that define the country鈥檚 history.
Every storyteller has a tool: a notebook, a camera, a microphone. For legendary author Octavia Butler, it was a powder blue typewriter. On it, she wrote some of the most influential American science fiction novels. Her stories explored race, power and what it means to be human.
That typewriter , and acting curator Jennifer Sieck explained Butler鈥檚 influence on the country鈥檚 history.
4 questions with Jennifer Sieck
Octavia Butler was born in Southern California and died in 2006. She鈥檚 known as a 鈥淕rande Dame鈥 of sci-fi. Can you tell us about her journey as a writer?
鈥淥ctavia Butler was interested in writing as a child, even as young as 10. And at a young age, she begged her mother for a typewriter. So she kept very focused on this passion and developed that through the years. She was very disciplined about her work.
鈥淎long with the typewriter, she also gave the museum six replacement ribbons, and I think that speaks to her discipline. She encouraged other writers to develop good habits and write every day as she did. And this typewriter, which was made around 1976, was one of several typewriters that she had. She wrote her first 10 books on typewriters. You can almost see, though, the adumbration of the personal computer coming into play with its shape.鈥
Is there a work of hers you鈥檙e particularly drawn to?
鈥淚鈥檓 fascinated by 鈥楰indred,鈥 where the protagonist 鈥 who鈥檚 an African American woman writer 鈥 travels in between California in the mid-1970s and pre-Civil War Maryland. She explores what it鈥檚 like to be enslaved and wrestles with that, and readers can get a sense of what that might have been like.
鈥淩eaders also might consider 鈥楶arable of the Sower,鈥 which takes place in 2024. And so we can read a science fiction novel that鈥檚 now in our past. She envisions a lot of challenges that we鈥檙e dealing with in the present, including with the environment and with wildfires. Her protagonist, an African American woman, finds hope in building community.
鈥淭hat book was so prescient. It hit the New York Times bestseller list more than two decades after it came out. And there鈥檚 an opera that鈥檚 been inspired by the novel and Butler鈥檚 emphasis on community. It鈥檚 been called a congregational opera because of that focus.鈥
How did Butler change science fiction?
鈥淧reviously, the genre was dominated by white male writers, and she brought her whole self into that genre and really changed it. She brought not only African American protagonists, but also the beginnings of what we would now call Afrofuturism, melding science, technology and even drawing on African folklore and mythology.鈥
What did Butler鈥檚 work reveal about America?
鈥淥ctavia Butler was interested in, and did, bring worlds into being with her words. And in some ways, that鈥檚 an American project.
鈥淭he Declaration of Independence brought a new world into being, and that world was visionary. And yet it still excluded some people such as African Americans and women. However, Butler wrote herself into American history, and she showed us that we can all write ourselves into American history. That鈥檚 a profoundly hopeful act in the same way that declaring independence and envisioning a new world was also a profoundly hopeful act.鈥
This interview has been edited for clarity.
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produced and edited this interview for broadcast with . Walkey also produced it for the web.
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