How Black Women Are Reshaping Afrofuturism
After the movie Black Panther became a cultural landmark in 2018, it鈥檚 appeared as if Black people have been an integral and natural presence in science fiction. That hasn鈥檛 always been the case. Science fiction as a genre has been around since the 1920s, when the namesake of the field鈥檚 prestigious Hugo Awards, Hugo Gernsback, coined the term. However, the first widely notable Black sci-fi characters in U.S. popular culture wouldn鈥檛 appear until 1966, with the first the Black Panther character appearing in Marvel comics, and Lt. Uhura appeared on the bridge of the starship Enterprise in the first season of Star Trek.
The Black characters, stories, and even the creators in the genre have had to struggle to gain a foothold. So, when scholar , it seemed like a chance for Black creators to thrive. Some did, but like science fiction as a whole, Afrofuturism was largely represented by Black men.
It would take nine decades after the science fiction genre was created and about 25 years after this subgenre was coined before Black women started finding their place and voices in the genre.
Now, the most popular names in Afrofuturism are women, and they seem to be reshaping the entire genre. Janelle Monae鈥檚 genre-transcending music tops the charts. Writers N.K. Jemisin and Nnedi Okorafor and may soon be getting screen adaptations. Even the TV reimagining of the modern classic comic, Watchmen, had a plot cemented in racial justice, with Regina King鈥檚 portrayal anchoring the series.
What is Afrofuturism?
Afrofuturism has been defined by scholar Mark Dery in his 1993 essay, 鈥淏lack to the Future,鈥 as 鈥渟peculative fiction that treats African-American themes and addresses African-American concerns in the context of twentieth-century technoculture鈥攁nd, more generally, African American signification that appropriates images of technology and a prosthetically enhanced future.鈥
This subgenre of science fiction is one where Black artists can tell stories of their limited past, intertwined their complex present to see a different future. That future is often more hopeful or at least one wherein we exist as more than junkies, thugs, or the help.
Thus, it鈥檚 no coincidence that work labeled 鈥淎frofuturist鈥 includes themes of utopianism and liberation in their depictions of the future. As such, it transcends categories, from literature to music to film and visual arts.
The term 鈥淎frofuturism鈥 was more of a retroactive naming. When Dery coined the term, it was already some 40 years after Sun Ra dazzled jazz audiences with bebop tunes performed to flashing lights and costumes. His music built on Swing Era big-band styles to create a sound that was faster, with experimental harmonies, and which was largely undanceable, but still found a wide audience that enjoyed its futuristic themes and virtuoso musicianship. This was around the time , published in 1952, which includes elements of sci-fi in the torture of a gifted man who is targeted by and becomes disillusioned with the racist country he had come to trust.
Dery and scholars of Afrofuturism had to dig back into the history of literature, music, and art to find other examples鈥擮ctavia Butler, Samuel R. Delany, George Clinton鈥檚 Parliament-Funkadelic collective, Jean-Michel Basquiat, and the artwork of William Henderson 鈥淏illy鈥 Graham, the first Black comic artist who is known for work on the Afrofuturist series Luke Cage, Hero for Hire as well as Black Panther. Save for Butler, the most well-known names of the early creators were largely men. Women have entered the genre over the years, but their entrance seemed to come after the term was established, and after space was created and deemed fitting of their work.
For Black women, more was at stake than participation in the subgenre. It鈥檚 more than about telling their stories鈥攊t鈥檚 about making the space one that will accommodate the Black woman鈥檚 experience.
In one of the interviews Mark Dery conducted for 鈥淏lack to the Future,鈥 Brown University scholar Tricia Rose said that Black women would change the patriarchal look of a cyborg if given the opportunity. 鈥淚f we had hordes and hordes of women who were paid to sit around and reimagine the science fiction genre, they might treat technology differently, placing it in a different relationship to the organism, and then what would cyborgs look like?鈥
It鈥檚 a question that could have been answered by recording artist Janelle Monae in her ongoing musical saga. She started with her debut album 鈥淭he ArchAndroid,鈥 in which she adopted the alter ego of Cindi Mayweather, an android that looks softer, with smoother lines and curves than the androids that sci-fi audiences are used to. But hers is just one example.
At the 2019 Chicago Comic & Entertainment Expo, Eisner-award winning comics artist and illustrator Afua Richardson said in an interview that Afrofuturism lets her write and create what she wants without needing permission or having parameters.
鈥淣ow [I鈥檓 in] a position where I can make [anything] and I don鈥檛 have to wait on anybody,鈥 Richardson said. 鈥淧eople will listen. They will care because I鈥檝e worked on popular [science fiction] stories. So now, I鈥檓 writing. I am writing so I can say, 鈥業 can complain all day, but what am I going to do to change it?鈥欌 For Richardson, Afrofuturist creation is also about using art for change鈥攕omething more than just entertaining through science fiction.
Afrofuturism and the Feminine Wave
In the early 2000s, the list of Afrofuturist names become more feminine. Blade was a popular Black male sci-fi comic and film character in the 鈥90s, but he was quickly replaced in favor by Storm of the X-Men film series. Writers Steven Barnes, Ishmael Reed, and Octavia Butler held the door open for Nalo Hopkinson, Nnedi Okorafor, Karen Lord, and N.K. Jemisin, who in 2016 was the first Black female writer to win the 鈥淏est Novel鈥 Hugo Award, and then went on to win it again in 2017 and 2018, the first time any writer had won it three years in a row.
Comics long have been a major artistic outlet for Afrofuturism. Writers like Jim Owsley (who later changed his name to Christopher Priest) broke through in the 1980s and 鈥90s to breathe life into classic Black characters like Luke Cage and Black Panther. Meanwhile, Milestone Media broke new ground with Icon, published by DC Comics in 1993, which was a story about an alien sent to Earth and raised during the period of slavery in the American South in the guise of a Black man.
These male-dominated stories held the door for Eve Ewing鈥檚 recent work on the Marvel series Ironheart, the story of Riri, a genius Black girl who dons Iron Man鈥檚 suit after he retires, and for Nnedi Okorafor in 2018 to pick up the story of Shuri, the Black Panther鈥檚 sister, in Wakanda Forever. Even Octavia Butler had a posthumous debut in comics with .
In music, Sun Ra and George Clinton spawned several acts starting in the 1950s that tapped into the Afrofuturist aesthetic, and which continue today (posthumously in the case of The Sun Ra Arkestra). A few women like Grace Jones and Janet Jackson also explored Afrofuturist themes, standing out next to male groups like Wu-Tang Clan. In time, more women artists came to dominate Afrofuturist music, such as Missy Elliot, Erykah Badu, Nicki Minaj, Beyonce, and Janelle Monae, even as some male artists like Outkast and RZA continued to explore the subgenre.
A closer look at this time through the eyes of Afrofuturist creators show that the change was not necessarily a revolution. Instead, it seems to be a matter of opportunity meeting possibility.
When these characters and their stories came along, they inspired young Black kids who would later become creators themselves.
Ashley Woods, the artist who illustrated the Afrofuturist comic series Niobe (written by actress Amandla Stenberg and Sebastian A. Jones)said that her early influences came from science fiction, and named Xena: Warrior Princess, Hercules, and stories from Greek mythology as her childhood favorites, which led to her work today. 鈥淚 just draw upon the movies and animation, just everything that I was into growing up,鈥 she said.
Stephanie Banks, a professional cosplayer at conventions, said that the Afrofuturism on television was what inspired her and her work today. 鈥淲ell, I always liked to play dress-up since I was a kid,鈥 Banks said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just as I got older, that I started learning more about cons [comic conventions] and seeing that there are people out there like me who dress up in experiences. So, I kind of found my groove, my people.鈥
Banks said that the men dominated the field of cosplayers in the early years, but that鈥檚 not the state today, and women are certainly growing in number at the conventions.
New Creators Means New Stories
With women taking more a prominent presence in the subgenre, the stories get to come from a perspective that hasn鈥檛 been explored. The 2018 film Fast Color featured three generations of women (played by Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Lorraine Toussaint, and Saniyya Sidney) and who have been hiding supernatural powers. In addition to the tension of running from the government, the film explores poverty, motherhood, and survival when living in U.S. society as a Black woman with a power strong enough to change the weather and the compositional makeup of matter.
Actor Laz Alonso, from Amazon Prime鈥檚 The Boys and the film Avatar, believes that leading role women now play in the Afrofuturism genre has resulted in the generation of a lot of new ideas and directions.
鈥淚 love the fact that Afrofuturism is now that next level of storytelling where we see ourselves in a different context,鈥 Alonso said. 鈥淲here we can lead the saving of worlds鈥攚hether it鈥檚 this world or another world, where women are empowered, and they鈥檙e not created under the guise of patriarchy. So, they鈥檙e not fetishized or limited under some man鈥檚 opinion.鈥
From these stories, we get androids like , or the protagonists of Nalo Hopkinson鈥檚 1998 book Brown Girl in the Ring, a dystopian novel that deconstructs the 鈥渦rban鈥 experience in a story about home, bodies, and real Black girl magic.
A Fresh Look and the Sci-fi Universe
This fresh look is key, said Darrell May, an art director and artist for Stranger Comics, the publisher of Niobe. 鈥淚 love Luke Skywalker,鈥 May said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 need to see that again. I need to see a young woman playing a half-elven Black woman like Niobe.鈥
He said that Afrofuturism stories created by Black women are so in demand became they are telling stories in a new way.
Rita Woods, author of the recent Afrofuturist novel Remembrance, believes that this new way comes from taking back and rewriting that history. 鈥淲hat do I think when I think fantasy? I actually see it as a reworking of our own history,鈥 Woods said. 鈥淎nd, in many ways, our history has been co-opted. And so, when I hear Afrofuturism, what comes to my mind is we鈥檝e taken [history] back, and we鈥檙e rewriting it. Not only are we writing our past, but also a lot of those stories that are steeped in our tradition, our storytelling tradition, our myths, our gods, our religion.鈥
鈥淲e are the protagonists,鈥 she adds. 鈥淲e are the stars of our own show, not killed off before the ending.鈥
Each foray into creating a new world, no matter what the medium maybe鈥攑en and paper, music, art, film, or design鈥攊s a personal endeavor for the writer. It鈥檚 a journey inward. Those inner lives and experiences of Black women are still largely uncharted for the entertainment public. For this reason, the popularity of Afrofuturist works by Black women are considered new and fresh stories.
For Black women in the audience, it鈥檚 an opportunity to finally be seen and represented in mediums the way we feel inside. For others, it鈥檚 a new perspective on some staid tales that are long overdue. It was bound to break through whether Black Panther happened or not. Women are reshaping the genre, but it鈥檚 all for the best.
Jonita Davis
is a film and culture critic, author, and freelance writer. She has been writing for more than 15 years on topics exploring the intersection of pop culture, identity, education, parenting, and how those relationships affect our lives as parents, women, Black women, nerds, and people of this planet. She is the founder and editor-at-large of The Black Cape, and has authored several books, her latest being We Gon鈥 Be Black Today: Exploration of Black Nerd Culture (Chicago Review Press, 2024). She is a member of the Hollywood Critics Association, International Film Society Critics, and is a Rotten Tomatoes independent critic. More of her work can be found at jonitadavis.com.
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