Rjurik Davidson's Blog

June 10, 2025

Critical Choices: Time Travel and Identity

My essay on Time Travel and Identity is available at Speculative Insight magazine. 

Here’s the opening section:

 

Regrets, who doesn’t have them? Who hasn’t made mistakes? Relationships, jobs, passions, living locations. Sometimes we took too long to end them or change them. Sometimes we jumped too early. Sometimes we never jumped at all and are now trapped in some hellish half-life. Sometimes we look back and think, I should have stayed. Palliative care worker, Bronny Ware, has famously listed the common regrets shared to her by dying patients:


 1. I wish I’d had the courage to live a life true to myself, not the life others expected of me.


2. I wish I hadn’t worked so hard.


3. I wish I’d had the courage to express my feelings (rather than suppressing them to keep the peace with others).


4. I wish I had stayed in touch with my friends.


5. I wish that I had let myself be happier.


These questions are of special interest to psychologists and philosophers, who reflect on life’s choices, on its possibilities and constraints. Each in their own way try to construct an adequate model of free will and determinism, of agency and structure, of identity and personal change – of who we are, of what makes us, of what we can do and what we can’t, and why this is so.

Science fiction has its own privileged sub-genre for examining these questions, one particularly suited to thought experiments about personal timelines, decisions and their consequences, of who we are and how we became that person and not someone else, another version of ourselves – the time travel story.

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Published on June 10, 2025 16:44

May 21, 2025

New Essay on Time Travel and Choices

Find a recent piece here on time travel and choices:

 

https://www.speculativeinsight.com/es...

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Published on May 21, 2025 22:31

May 4, 2018

Ursula K. Le Guin: Our Lodestar

A while ago, I wrote an obituary on Le Guin for Overland magazine, which is available here.


 


Here’s the article:


 


‘The King was pregnant.’


So wrote Ursula K Le Guin in her 1969 classic The Left Hand of Darkness – one of the greatest of science fiction novels. The populace of Gethen were androgynous. During their sexual life cycle, they entered a phase were they could become either male or female. Thus the King can be pregnant. When I visited her some years ago at her home in Portland, Oregon, she explained to me that her ‘first intention for that book was simply to write about people who didn’t have war. The whole gender thing came in through the side door. “Hey, these people are much more interesting than I realised!”’


The Left Hand of Darkness quickly garnered a number of awards and became a classic of feminist science fiction – a meditation on gender, war and state formation. In the novel, many of Le Guin’s interests came into focus. She was a leftist, a feminist, a Taoist. If the intersection of these three positions helps explain many of her narratives, her science fiction also showed the influence of her anthropologist parents. Her fiction was interested in culture and the way it forms and limits our perspectives.


By introducing such themes, Le Guin was part of a wave of science fiction writers who transformed the field from the stereotypical images of it as obsessed with technology, as the province of egg-head scientists or men of action (represented most clearly in US science fiction by the work of Isaac Asimov and Robert Heinlein). These new writers were interested in race, class, gender, sexuality, psychology, mass media, altered states of consciousness, eastern mysticism and other alternative philosophies. Le Guin’s contemporaries included the feminist writers Joanna Russ and James Tiptree Jr (Alice Sheldon), Vonda Macintyre and Suzy McKee Charnas, African-American gay writer Samuel R Delany, New Leftists such as Norman Spinrad or Harlan Ellison, anarchist Michael Moorcock, and that producer of bizarre fabulations, JG Ballard. Many of them introduced the techniques of modernism, breaking apart typical narrative structures and introducing ambitious experiments in form and style.


Though Le Guin stood on the more formally conservative side of this movement, she was much influenced by the classics of realism and modernism, in particular Virginia Woolf. In an early essay she suggested that the ‘reduction of narrative to conflict is absurd’ and proposed that the ‘proper, fitting shape for a novel might be that of a sack, a bag.’ This is not the kind of thing you’d get away with in Hollywood nowadays, or in commercial writing for that matter (see for example Donald Maas’s Writing The Breakout Novel for the opposite opinion), but in Le Guin’s eyes, this allowed her to introduce the ‘poor, the uneducated, the faceless masses, and all the women’ into her fiction.


In their own ways, these 1960s writers reflected the radical movements of their time. When I visited her, Le Guin explained to me that during this period, we [Le Guin and her husband Charles] ‘were doing civil rights marches, then … the whole resistance to Vietnam was building up. And that I was involved in right from the start, for years. Out here, it wasn’t until late in the [civil rights] movement, when the [anti-Vietnam] war movement was beginning to mix with it, that the great marches took place. Those we were on.’ Le Guin, however, was ‘not an organiser. I carry signs around. There was a lot of marching. In the seventies, the whole feminist thing came up. Then the marches were for abortion rights … So it did seem like for years I was walking round downtown with some kind of sign.’


Given her later triumphs, it’s ironic that Le Guin’s career began inauspiciously. She started late, in her thirties, and didn’t need to earn her crust ‘slumming it in the pulps’ as scholar George Slusser once described it. Her first novel, Rocannon’s World, was an awkward mix of science fiction and fantasy, which she later described as a mixture of colours that didn’t quite go together. During the sixties it was still possible to produce several midlist novels and maintain a career. This gave Le Guin breathing space not afforded nowadays. One wonders what might have happened if the current algorithms of the publishing industry were in place at the time. Would Le Guin have survived her first tentative efforts? An intriguing question, but one suspects her talent would have seen her through.


In the mid-sixties, Le Guin entered a period of incredible fertility. For a decade between the mid 1960s and the mid 1970s she produced a group of novels of visionary intensity. She started with the first of her Earthsea novels. The Left Hand of Darkness established her as a science fiction writer of the first rank. Some years later she wrote The Dispossessed, in which she placed three societies side by side: a struggling anarchist utopia on a barren moon, a capitalist society resembling our own, and a bureaucratic state much like the Stalinist regimes of Eastern Europe. In that novel, Le Guin’s Taoism helps to resolve the narrative questions thrown up when an anarchist physicist moves from his home to the capitalist world.


For those of us seeking to write politically conscious fiction it should be clear just how important Le Guin is. This was what drew me to make the pilgrimage to Portland a little over fifteen years ago as I was researching my PhD. Le Guin suggested a hotel for me to stay at and I took a bus out from the city to find her house with ‘the red door’ as she described it to me. When we sat down to speak in the lounge room of her house (which was as graceful and tasteful as her work), I asked her the way that she conceived of the relationship of politics to art. How does one include politics and not betray the art, since art is not a political document or essay? Le Guin agreed that it had always been:


a major question for me, from college on – the question of what does an artist do with her politics? How directly can they be expressed in art? Do they belong there at all? Or, as I believe, to say that one is not a political person is to kid oneself. All writing is political, the more conscious you are of it, the better, but that still doesn’t mean that you have to preach. As a disciple of Virginia Woolf, I don’t like didactic writing. I don’t like art that preaches at you.


Elsewhere, she wrote that art is best thought of as a ‘thought experiment’.


Le Guin’s work was not immune to criticism. For some feminists, her use of male protagonists tended to give her narratives a too traditional cast. Her fantasy world of Earthsea seemed – in the first three books – to be a traditional patriarchal society in which only men can be wizards (though its protagonist is black-skinned). Other radical critics saw her resolution in The Dispossessed as based on the interdependence of the three societies as lacking radical edge. In The Left Hand of Darkness she used the pronoun ‘he’ for her androgynous species (thus allowing a line like ‘The King was pregnant’) and so coloured them, in the reader’s mind, as male. Of course, Le Guin faced such problems precisely because she investigated these subjects first. Such is the fate of innovators.


In any case, she responded to these criticisms, entering into the dialogue of which all writing is a part. She wrote a wonderful essay (later revised) approaching the problem of feminism and pronouns in The Left Hand of Darkness. On the book’s 25th anniversary, Le Guin published a new version that included a chapter at the end of the book using genderless pronouns instead.


Her fourth book of the Earthsea series, Tehanu, was a brilliant feminist recasting of the series, in which we discover our first female wizard (though her final Earthsea novel, The Other Wind, sits more uncomfortably). Her essays show her to be an astute intelligence, conscious of the problems she is wrestling with. She takes her work seriously, and even though she bristled at the appellation of science fiction writer (according to all accounts she could be prickly and occasionally precious about her words – but what serious writer isn’t?) she defended the genre in essays such as ‘Why Are Americans Afraid of Dragons?’ with a force unequalled.


Le Guin’s later works continued with her characteristic themes and built on the worlds she had invented. Some were more successful than others – my own favourites include her meditation on slavery and revolution, Four Ways to Forgiveness and Lavinia, her rewriting of Virgil’s Aenead – but they all showed her characteristic grace and thoughtfulness. She kept leftist and feminist fires burning in the long decline of radical politics from the 1980s onwards. Indeed, in more recent times, she gave a number of broadsides against capitalism in general and in particular against the way in which it has distorted the publishing industry. Her acceptance speech at the National Book Awards is essential reading, in which she argues that:


Books aren’t just commodities; the profit motive is often in conflict with the aims of art. We live in capitalism, its power seems inescapable – but then, so did the divine right of kings. Any human power can be resisted and changed by human beings. Resistance and change often begin in art. Very often in our art, the art of words.


We have lost a giant of literature and a model for what science fiction should try to do. Literary influence is notoriously difficult to trace but there can be little doubt that Le Guin influenced an entire generation of writers who came after her. For me, she has always been a standard to strive for, someone to emulate, a literary hero so to speak (dangerous though it is, to have heroes at all). It’s a sign of the disdain that the literary establishment has for speculative fiction that Le Guin wasn’t awarded a Nobel prize. I can’t think of a writer more worthy. For those of us who love her work and the things she stood for, we can only do our best to follow in her footsteps. She is the lodestar that should guide our literary ships, even if she has crossed the ocean now and reached the farthest shore.


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Published on May 04, 2018 18:00

September 12, 2017

Greene’s ‘The Quiet American’


There must be two major caveats to giving Greene’s novels a 5-star rating. First, the way the characters come to symbolise their countries can’t help but be a little strained. Second, the book is drenched in a kind of soft orientalism, which plays out mostly in the character of Phuong, so distand and unfathomable, so other, so passive, so seen from without. It’s an orientalism that can’t help but be open to feminist critique. And yet, what a beautifully constructed book that almost perfectly marries the political and the personal. Some of the lines are magnificent. A brilliant achievement. I loved it.


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Published on September 12, 2017 14:35

September 10, 2017

Alan Moore’s Providence Act 3


Moore recuperates the problems of the earlier issues in this final, clever, Act. The problems in the earlier issues were narrative ones — and it’s pretty instructive, from a writing point of vier. The journalist Black’s desire to write a history of New England occult culture lacks stakes. That is, there’s nothing compelling — either storywise or on a personal lever — driving Black towards his goal. So in earlier volumes theres a meandering quality to the issues, which echoes some of Lovercraft’s own stories, it must be said. Still, the “information gathering” on Black’s part undermines any sense of drive of drama. “What’s at stake?” we ask. This final collection redeems that, by expanding the story out to a more cosmic level, and suddenly Moore’s cleverness, both structural and narrative, shine. He gives us a true sense of cosmic horror, even if many of the references require a good knowledge of weird literature. This one, then, redeems what otherwise would have been a flat story that began strongly, lost its way in the middle, but came through with cosmic grandeur.


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Published on September 10, 2017 18:59

January 31, 2017

The Stars Askew Giveaway




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Goodreads Book Giveaway



The Stars Askew by Rjurik Davidson



The Stars Askew



by Rjurik Davidson




Giveaway ends February 15, 2017.



See the giveaway details

at Goodreads.





Enter Giveaway




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Published on January 31, 2017 13:10

November 16, 2016

Polansky’s ‘A City Dreaming’

Daniel Polansky lives in New York, though I think he’s originally from Maryland, which gives him the advantage of being both an insider and an outsider in the Big Apple. This liminal position is one of the things that tends to make original art — think of the Irish writers in London and Paris — and may go some way to explaining why ‘A City Dreaming’ is so excellent. The novel isn’t so much about a single conflict or goal, but rather about the kind of world/New York the magician-protagonist M lives in. It’s full of quirky and often hilarious events; the scenarios are imaginative and absurd. Polansky’s world-view is something like a humorous existentialism and its form is reminiscent of European novels of the 20th century. In other words, in the world of genre, it’s formally inventive — you will find no tedious Robert McKee 3 act structure here. Thus, the novel is bound to unsettle genre readers. In short, I loved it and it’s the kind of thing genre readers should, but all too often don’t, read. Go and get it. It’s great.

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Published on November 16, 2016 15:59

August 18, 2016

Locked Out In Sydney

Locked out in Sydney, A poem


I’m locked out, in Sydney.

Sitting on the street.

Waiting for someone with a key.

It feels like a metaphor,

Except I’m really actually locked out,

In sydney. Like really, without a key.

Keep your silly metaphors to yourself. When you’re locked out,

You’re not calling for Yeats to come around.

You’re calling a locksmith.



[written on an iPhone]

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Published on August 18, 2016 14:01

August 10, 2016

The Holographic Deer

In my dream last night, I was given the job of searching for a missing man, who had disappeared. Slowly the people who were aiding me in the search began to change into strange stepford wives-ey folk, blank and creepy, and I ended up fleeing through a forest with them pursuing me. When I arrived at a huge American mall, I found that I was with four of them. I realised I could free them from their mental domination if I could get them to remember their faith before they were ‘taken’ — buddhism, christianity, whatever. Somewhere along the line I took the opportunity to enter a “hunting and antiques” shop to buy a handgun (this was America, after all). The woman who owned it took me through the wide, open restaurant (huh?) to the shooting range in the corner, where I pointed the gun at a churning barrel of water, expecting some sort of holographic deer to raise its head at any moment. “It’s not going to be a real deer is it?!” I cried out.

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Published on August 10, 2016 16:38

July 18, 2016

Newtown Review of Books has reviewed The Stars Askew.

Newtown Review of Books has reviewed The Stars Askew:


The Stars Askew  continues Australian fantasy author Rjurik Davidson’s dark tale of revolution, treachery and personal sacrifice begun in his debut novel  Unwrapped Sky .


Again, this story is set in the richly imagined city of Caeli Amur where magical beasts, grinding totalitarianism, revolutionary fervour and warped thaumaturgists blend together to create a fantastical landscape. And once again its vision is imperturbably dark.


The revolution may have been won. The workers may have cast off the repressive hand of the ruling Houses, but the insurgents must now come to terms with making their dreams a reality. Ruling, it seems, is not so easy as wanting to rule.


In fact, the book opens with the murder of one of the revolutionary leaders, leaving Kata, the morally compromised House Technis thief-turned-revolutionary, to forge an uneasy alliance with Rikard of the hard-line ‘vigilant’ movement in order to find the murderer. But is the killer a House assassin or one of the revolution’s own? Meanwhile, the thaumaturgist Maximillian, joined with the essence of the dead god Aya, is engaged in an existential struggle for control of his own body, just as Armand, the factotum of ill-fated House Technis Officiate Boris Autec, flees the city with a very special item.

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Published on July 18, 2016 20:40