Lilith's Brood is a collection of three works by Octavia E. Butler. The three volumes of this science fiction series (Dawn, Adulthood Rites, and Imago) were previously collected in the now out-of-print omnibus edition Xenogenesis. The collection was first published under the current title of Lilith's Brood in 2000.[1]

Lilith's Brood
First combined edition
publ. GuildAmerica Books

Dawn
Adulthood Rites
Imago
AuthorOctavia E. Butler
Cover artistPat Morrissey
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction
PublisherGrand Central Publishing
Published1987–1989
No. of books3

Synopsis

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Dawn (1987)

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The first novel in the trilogy, Dawn, begins with Lilith Iyapo, a Black human woman, alone in what appears to be a prison cell. She has memories of this happening before, with an enigmatic voice that asks strange questions. She has no idea who this is or what they want. She remembers a nuclear war and an earlier traffic accident in which her husband and child had been killed.

The truth emerges in stages. The same questions are asked. She is then visited by humanoid beings whose appearance terrifies her, even though they behave well. She learns that the nuclear war had left the Earth uninhabitable. Humans are all but extinct. The few survivors were plucked from the dying Earth by an alien race, the Oankali. Lilith has awakened 250 years after the war on a living Oankali ship.

At first, she is repulsed by the alienness of her saviors/captors. The Oankali have sensory tentacles all over their bodies, including locations of human sensory organs, with which they perceive the world differently than humans. Stranger still, the Oankali have three sexes: male, female, and ooloi. Oankali have the ability to perceive genetic biochemistry, but the ooloi manipulate genetic material to mutate other beings and build offspring from their mates' genetic material.

Lilith eventually bonds to Nikanj, an ooloi. The Oankali have made Earth habitable and obtain Lilith's help in Awakening and training humans to survive on the changed Earth. In exchange, the Oankali want to interbreed with the humans to blend the human and Oankali races, a biological imperative they compare to a human's need to breathe. They perceive the interbreeding as mutually beneficial; in particular, it will solve what the Oankali think is the humans' fatal combination of intelligence and hierarchical tendencies. They are particularly attracted to humans' "talent" for cancer, which they will use to reshape themselves. The humans rebel against Lilith and the proposed "gene trade," and kill Joseph, Lilith's new mate. This group is sent to Earth without her. Nikanj uses Joseph's collected DNA to impregnate Lilith with the first Oankali/human child.

Adulthood Rites (1988)

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The second book, Adulthood Rites, takes place years after the end of Dawn. Humans and Oankali live together on Earth, but not in complete peace. Some humans have accepted the bargain and live with the Oankali, giving birth to hybrid children called "constructs." Others, however, have refused the bargain and live in separate, all-human, "resister" villages. The ooloi have made all humans infertile, so the only children born are those made with ooloi intervention. This creates a great deal of tension and strain as the humans consider their lives meaningless without reproduction, especially as they see themselves being outbred by the Oankali-human constructs. Desperate humans often steal human-looking construct children to raise as their own.

The main character of this book, Akin, is the first male construct born to a human mother (Lilith). Akin has more human in him than any construct before him. Adulthood Rites focuses on Akin's struggle with his human and Oankali heritage. As a human, he understands the desire to fight for the survival of humanity as an independent race. As an Oankali he understands that the combination of the species is necessary and that humans would destroy themselves again if left alone. Akin is kidnapped by the resisters as an infant, when the only evidence of his construct status is a tentacle-like tongue through which he samples his world in the Oankali manner of identifying DNA. The Oankali allow the resisters to keep him for a sustained period of time so that he might understand his human nature more fully, but at the cost of the connection to his paired sibling that would have happened had he stayed with his family. His isolation is hugely painful to them both, and he is taken to the orbiting ship to experience whatever healing he and his insufficiently-paired sibling can be granted. During that time, he travels around the ship with an Akjai, an Oankali who has no human DNA.

Through these experiences, he realizes that humans, too, need an Akjai group, and his conviction ultimately persuades the Oankali. Humans will be given Mars, modified sufficiently to (barely) support human existence, despite the Oankali certainty that the Mars colony will destroy itself eventually. Akin returns to tell the resisters and begin gathering them up to have their fertility restored before transport to their new world.

Imago (1989)

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The final book of the trilogy, Imago, is the shortest and the only one written from the first-person perspective. Imago shows the reader what has been hinted at for the last two books: the full potential of the new human-Oankali hybrid species. The story is in the first person from the perspective of Jodahs, the first ooloi construct, and a child of Lilith. Through its unique heritage, it has unlocked latent genetic potential of humans and Oankali. Part of the story is about Jodahs and another child of Lilith, Aaor. Both children are uncomfortable metamorphosing into the ooloi third sex, as both had previously thought themselves male and female, respectively. Through the novel, Jodahs comes to term with its own sex and helps Aaor with its metamorphosis.

Akin's proposal for a Mars colony in the previous book has been realized, providing an opportunity for humans who wish to live independently from the Oankali. Many humans have already migrated there, though the most hateful and barbaric of them still resist so that the Oankali render them unconscious and store them on the ship for genetic material. In an effort to contact human resisters for the Mars colony, Jodahs encounters a previously unknown group of humans: in a mountain village where sterile humans gathered but found one girl who turned out to be fertile, surviving from generation to generation through incest that resulted in compounding genetic damage—neurofibromatosis. The novel focuses on Jodahs's mission to heal them, make peace with them, and integrate them into the Oankali way with the other humans. When, for instance, Jodahs and Aaor are captured, they heal the guards of their disease and deformities, demonstrating their goodwill and softening resistance to them. The novel ends with the humans more willingly acquiescing to the Oankali.

Background

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In her 2000 interview with Charles Brown, Butler identified the Cold War under the Reagan Administration as a main motivator for the trilogy: "I was pretty despairing when I began the Xenogenesis books. This was back during the first Reagan administration, when the guy was talking about ‘winnable’ nuclear wars, ‘limited’ nuclear wars and all that. It scared me that we were electing someone who was talking that way. What if he meant it?"[2]

Butler later expanded her explanation in an interview with Joshunda Sanders:

I thought there must be something basic, something really genetically wrong with us if we're falling for this stuff [Reagan’s rhetoric]. And I came up with these characteristics. The aliens arrive after the war and they tell us that we have these two characteristics that don't work and play well together. They are intelligent, and they tell us we're the most intelligent species they've come across. But we're also hierarchical. And I put this after the big war because it's kind of an example. We've one-upped ourselves to death, just our tendency to one-up each other as individuals and groups, large and small.[3]

Themes

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What I intended to do when I began the novels...was change [human] males enough so that the hierarchical behavior would no longer be a big problem.

—Octavia E. Butler, in "'Radio Imagination': Octavia Butler on the Poetics of Narrative Embodiment."

Throughout the Xenogenesis trilogy themes of sexuality, gender, race, and species are explored. The Oankali believe that the human species has an inevitably self-destructive "Contradiction" between their high intelligence and their hierarchical nature. According to the Oankali, this is what caused the war that almost ended the human race, and this is why they cannot leave humans alone. Lilith and the Oankali-human hybrids are constantly battling with this inner conflict. According to Tor.com's Erika Nelson,[4] the trilogy parallels the story of African slaves in America and the conflict that later generations of African Americans feel regarding their integration into American society. The human-Oankali hybrids feel that they have somehow betrayed their human side by integrating into Oankali society, but at the same time, because of the vast power imbalance, they never really had another viable option. In addition to allegorizing slavery, the trilogy more generally is written "in the context of colonization,"[5] as Nelson puts it, raising broad questions of coercion and agency. The relationship between the Oankali and the humans speaks to a range of imperialist relationships, from slavery to internment camps[6] to eugenics. The series also draws upon elements of the myth of Lilith, the first wife of Adam.

The series also heavily explores themes of consent and coercion.[7]

In addition to the social themes, the possible results of developing genetic science and biologically based technology are shown by the Oankali's genetic mastery. Joan Slonczewski, a biologist, published a review of the series in which she discusses the biological implications of the ooloi and how they can, through genetic engineering, achieve positive effects from "bad" genes such as a predisposition for cancer.[8] Biological determinism is another ongoing thematic concern in the trilogy that links Butler's use of social and scientific themes; because the Oankali believe above all in a species' innate biological tendencies, characters must constantly negotiate between their supposed biological capacities and the limits of their individual will.[5]

Reception

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Orson Scott Card commends the Xenogenesis trilogy as "more satisfying as hard science fiction" than Butler's earlier Patternist novels, specifically in that they show "how much power her storytelling has gained" in the intervening years.

In terms of each novel, Adele Newson praises the prose of Dawn, as "engaging" and having "a single-minded intensity." She highlights the relationship among the novel's main characters, Lilith and Joseph, as being unusual for science fiction to the point of being "refreshing" and "sensuous." Calling Lilith "the epitome of heroic womanism," Newson argues that "Lilith's life, like that of the black woman's, is a metaphor for the quest which would resolve the problem of her being both revered and despised by those with whom she inhabits society. In contrast, Newson finds the story's development in Adulthood Rites "disappointing": Lilith, she points out, "does little more than sulk silently away" and the story relies so much on "laborious" dialogue that it becomes "more or less a treatise in on the contradictory and often violent nature of humankind."[9]

Similarly, Ted White from The Washington Post finds Imago verbose and "wandering" and concludes that, as an end to the trilogy, it is "anticlimactic."[10]

Each of the three novels originally was nominated for the Locus Award for Best Science Fiction Novel in the year it was published (1987, 1988, and 1989), though none of the books won the award.[11]

Adaptations

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In September 2015, it was announced that producer Allen Bain had optioned the rights to make Dawn for television.[12] On February 26, 2020, Amazon Studios acquired the streaming rights with Victoria Mahoney writing and directing the pilot episode based on Dawn, and will produce the series with Bain, Pearl, and Carter's Bainframe, Ava DuVernay's Array Filmworks and Charles D. King's MACRO.[13]

Further reading

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Scholarship

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  • Ackerman, Erin M. Pryor (Spring 2008), "Becoming and Belonging: The Productivity of Pleasures and Desires in Octavia Butler's "Xenogenesis" Trilogy", Extrapolation, 49 (1).
  • Belk, Nolan (September 2008), "The Certainty of the Flesh: Octavia Butler's Use of the Erotic in the Xenogenesis Trilogy", Utopian Studies, 19 (3): 369–389, doi:10.2307/20719917, JSTOR 20719917.
  • Bonner, Frances (Spring 1990), "Difference and Desire, Slavery and Seduction: Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis", Foundation, 48: 50–62.
  • Boulter, Amanda (1996), "Polymorphous Futures: Octavia E. Butler's Xenogenesis Trilogy", in Tim Armstrong (ed.), American Bodies: Cultural Histories of the Physique, NYU Press, pp. 170–185.
  • Braid, Christina (March 2000), "Contemplating and Contesting Violence in Dystopia: Violence in Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis Trilogy", Contemporary Justice Review, 9 (1): 47–65, doi:10.1080/10282580600564891.
  • Brataas, Delilah Bermudez (Spring 2006), "Becoming Utopia in Octavia E. Butler's Xenogenesis Series", Foundation: The International Review of Science Fiction, 35 (96): 84–101.
  • Curtis, Claire P (January 2015), "Utopian Possibilities: Disability, Norms, and Eugenics in Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis", Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 9 (1): 19–33, doi:10.3828/jlcds.2015.2.
  • Federmayer, Eva (Spring 2000), "Octavia Butler's Maternal Cyborgs: The Black Female World of the Xenogenesis Trilogy", Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies, 6 (1): 103–118, JSTOR 41274076.
  • Freccero, Carla (1999), "Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis", Popular Culture: An Introduction, New York UP, pp. 72–75.
  • Goss, Theodora (Fall 2007), "The Gothic Technological Imaginary in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis", Modern Fiction Studies, 53 (3): 434–459, doi:10.1353/mfs.2007.0068.
  • Green, Michelle Erica (1994), "'There Goes the Neighborhood': Octavia Butler's Demand for Diversity in Utopias", in Jane L. Donawerth; Carol A. Kolmerten (eds.), Utopian and Science Fiction by Women: Worlds of Difference, Syracuse University Press, pp. 166–189.
  • Grewe-Volpp, Christa (2003), "Octavia Butler and the Nature/Culture Divide: An Ecofeminist Approach to the Xenogenesis Trilogy", in Sylvia Mayer (ed.), Restoring the Connection to the Natural World: Essays on the African American Environmental Imagination, LIT, pp. 149–173.
  • Holden, Rebecca J (Spring 1998), "The High Costs of Cyborg Survival: Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis Trilogy", Foundation (72): 49–57.
  • Jacobs, Naomi (2003), "Posthuman Bodies and Agency in Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis", in Tom Moylan; Raffaella Baccolini (eds.), Dark Horizons: Science Fiction and the Dystopian Imagination, Routledge, pp. 91–112, ISBN 978-0415966146
  • Jesser, Nancy (Spring 2002), "Blood, Genes and Gender in Octavia Butler's Kindred and Dawn", Extrapolation, 43 (1): 36–61, doi:10.3828/extr.2002.43.1.05.
  • Johns, Adam (2009), "Octavia Butler and the Art of Pseudoscience", English Language Notes, 47 (2): 95–107, doi:10.1215/00138282-47.2.95.
  • Johns, J. Adam (2010), "Becoming Medusa: Octavia Butler's 'Lilith's Brood' and Sociobiology", Science Fiction Studies, 37 (3): 382–400, JSTOR 25746440.
  • Magedanz, Stacy (2012), "The Captivity Narrative in Octavia E. Butler's Adulthood Rites", Extrapolation, 53 (1): 45, doi:10.3828/extr.2012.4.
  • Miller, Jim (1998), "Post-Apocalyptic Hoping: Octavia Butler's Dystopian/Utopian Vision", Science Fiction Studies, 25 (2): 336–360, JSTOR 4240705.
  • Nanda, Aparajita (2011), "Re-Writing the Bhabhian "Mimic Man": Akin, the Posthuman Other in Octavia Butler's Adulthood Rites", Ariel, 41 (3/4): 115–135.
  • Nanda, Aparajita (2013), "Power, Politics, and Domestic Desire in Octavia Butler's Lilith's Brood", Callaloo, 36 (3): 773–788, doi:10.1353/cal.2013.0164.
  • Obourn, Megan (Spring 2013), "Octavia Butler's Disabled Futures", Contemporary Literature, 54 (1): 109–138, doi:10.1353/cli.2013.0001.
  • Osherow, Michele (Spring 2000), "The Dawn of a New Lilith: Revisionary Mythmaking in Women's Science Fiction", NWSA Journal, 12 (1): 68–83, JSTOR 4316709.
  • Outterson, Sarah (2008), "Diversity, Change, Violence: Octavia Butler's Pedagogical Philosophy", Utopian Studies, 19 (3): 433–456, doi:10.2307/20719920, JSTOR 20719920.
  • Peppers, Cathy (1995), "Dialogic Origins and Alien Identities in Butler's Xenogensis", Science Fiction Studies, 22 (65).
  • Plisner, Andrew (May 2009), "Arboreal Dialogics: An Ecocritical Exploration of Octavia Butler's Dawn", African Identities, 7 (2): 145–159, doi:10.1080/14725840902808819.
  • Sands, Peter (200), "Octavia Butler's Chiastic Cannibalistics", Utopian Studies, 14 (1): 1–14, JSTOR 20718543.
  • Schwab, Gabriele (2006), "Ethnographies of the Future: Personhood, Agency, and Power in Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis", in Bill Maurer; Gabriele Schwab (eds.), Accelerating Possession: Global Futures of Property and Personhood, Columbia UP, pp. 204–228, ISBN 9780231137843
  • Seed, David (2003), "Posthuman Bodies and Agency in Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis", in Raffaella Baccolini; Tom Moylan (eds.), Dark Horizons: Science Fiction and the Dystopian Imagination, Routledge, pp. 91–111, ISBN 978-0415966146
  • Smith, Rachel Greenwald (Fall 2009), "Ecology beyond Ecology: Life After the Accident in Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis Trilogy", Modern Fiction Studies, 55 (3): 545–565, doi:10.1353/mfs.0.1627.
  • Smith, Stephanie A (Winter 1993), "Morphing, Materialism, and the Marketing of Xenogenesis", Genders, 18: 67–86.
  • Stickgold-Sarah, Jessie (Fall 2010), "'Your Children Will Know Us, You Never Will': The Pessimistic Utopia of Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis Trilogy", Extrapolation, 51 (3), doi:10.3828/extr.2010.51.3.6
  • Talbot, Mary M (Winter 1996), "'Embracing Otherness': An Examination of Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis Trilogy", Kimota, 5: 45–49.
  • Tucker, Jeffrey A (2007), "The Human Contradiction: Identity and/as Essence in Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis Trilogy", Yearbook of English Studies, 37 (2): 164–181, doi:10.1353/yes.2007.0001, JSTOR 20479308.
  • Wallace, Molly (Spring 2009), "Reading Octavia Butler's "Xenogenesis" After Seattle", Contemporary Literature, 50 (1): 94–128, doi:10.1353/cli.0.0049, JSTOR 20616414.
  • White, Eric (1993), "The Erotics of Becoming: Xenogenesis and The Thing", Science Fiction Studies, 20 (3): 394–408, JSTOR 4240279.
  • Wood, Sarah (2005), "Subversion through Inclusion: Octavia Butler's Interrogation of Religion in Xenogenesis and Wild Seed", Femspec, 6 (1): 87–99.
  • Yu, Jeboon (2004), "The Representation of Inappropriate/d Others: The Epistemology of Donna Haraway's Cyborg Feminism and Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis Series", Journal of English Language and Literature, 50 (3): 759–777.
  • Slonczewski, Joan (30 June 2000). Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis Trilogy: A Biologist's Response. SFRA. Cleveland..

Reviews

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References

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  1. ^ Butler, Octavia (2000). Lilith's Brood. Grand Central Publishing.
  2. ^ “Octavia E. Butler: Persistence.” Interview with Charles Brown. Locus Magazine. June 2000.
  3. ^ "Interview with Octavia Butler Archived 2022-10-03 at the Wayback Machine.” Interview with Joshunda Sanders. In Motion Magazine. March 14, 2004.
  4. ^ Nelson, Erika (30 September 2009). "Sleeping With the Enemy: Octavia Butler's Dawn". Archived from the original on 2024-09-16. Retrieved 2013-11-15.
  5. ^ a b "Negotiating Difference in Octavia Butler's Adulthood Rites". Tor.com. 2009-10-12. Archived from the original on 2024-09-16. Retrieved 2017-05-29.
  6. ^ "Sleeping With the Enemy: Octavia Butler's Dawn". Tor.com. 2009-09-30. Archived from the original on 2017-06-07. Retrieved 2017-05-29.
  7. ^ Nanda, Aparajita (2013). "Power, Politics, and Domestic Desire in Octavia Butler's Lilith's Brood". Callaloo. 36 (3): 773–788. doi:10.1353/cal.2013.0164. ISSN 1080-6512. Archived from the original on 2020-10-25. Retrieved 2022-02-28.
  8. ^ Slonczewski, Joan. "Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis Trilogy: A Biologist's Response". Archived from the original on 31 January 2014. Retrieved 24 November 2013.
  9. ^ Newson, Adele S. "Review of Dawn and Adulthood Rites." Black American Literature Forum 23 Summer 1989, pp. 389-396.
  10. ^ White, Ted. "Love with the Proper Stranger." The Washington Post. 25 June 1989, p. X8.
  11. ^ "The LOCUS Index to SF Awards". Archived from the original on 28 August 2013. Retrieved 24 November 2013.
  12. ^ Allen Bain's Bainframe Awakens 'Dawn'; Sci-Fi Novel Is Part Of 'Lilith's Brood' Series, Deadline.com, 02 September 2015.
  13. ^ Goldberg, Lesley (February 26, 2020). "Ava DuVernay, Victoria Mahoney Team for 'Dawn' TV Series at Amazon". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on May 13, 2020. Retrieved May 26, 2020.
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