Woman on the Edge of Time

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Woman on the Edge of Time

Cover of the Fawcett 1988 edition (paperback)
Author Marge Piercy
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Science fiction
Utopian fiction
Publisher Alfred A. Knopf
Publication date 1976
Media type Print (Hardcover and Paperback)
Pages 369pp (First edition)
ISBN ISBN 0-394-49986-7 (First edition, hardcover)

Marge Piercy's novel Woman on the Edge of Time (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1976)


Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Thirty-seven-year-old Hispanic Consuelo (Connie) Ramos makes contact with the future though Luciente. She travels to Luciente's time, in which a number of goals of the political and social agenda of the late sixties and early seventies radical movements have been fulfilled. Environmental pollution, homophobia, racism, phallogocentrism, class-subordination, consumerism, imperialism, and totalitarianism no longer exist in the rural community of Mattapoisett. The death penalty, however, continues to exist ("We don't think it's right to kill (...). Only convenient."), as does war. Connie lives during an important time in history which will determine the outcome of Luciente's future. When Connie seems to be giving into the situation surrounding her she ends up visiting a different future. Her visits to an alternate future in which a wealthy elite living on space platforms subdues the majority of the population with drugs and harvests these earth-bound humans' organs startles her into taking action in her time. The technocrats controlling this horrific future attempt to influence the past--Connie's present--to ensure the existence of their future.

The novel gives little indication as to whether or not Connie's visions are by-products of a mental disease or are meant to be taken literally, but ultimately, Connie's confrontation with the future incites her to a violent action which will ensure her indefinite detention at the Rockover Psychiatric Institution. She will undoubtedly be treated with electroconvulsive therapy and be "filed away among the living cancers of the chronic wards." Though her actions do not ensure the existence of the Mattapoisett future, Connie nevertheless sees her act as a victory: "I'm a dead woman now too. (...) But I did fight them. (...) I tried."[1]

[edit] Notes and references

  1. ^ p. 375 of the Women's Press editions of 1979 and 1987.

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] External links

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