[Home]History of James Tiptree Junior

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Revision 25 . . (edit) December 4, 2001 4:06 am by Zundark [redirect]
Revision 24 . . (edit) December 4, 2001 3:53 am by (logged).191.188.xxx
Revision 23 . . December 4, 2001 3:43 am by The Anome [middle names, day, place of birth]
Revision 22 . . (edit) December 4, 2001 3:40 am by The Anome [whoops]
Revision 21 . . (edit) December 4, 2001 3:22 am by Zundark [add /Talk]
Revision 20 . . December 4, 2001 3:09 am by The Anome [both names in bold]
Revision 19 . . October 18, 2001 4:16 am by RjLesch
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff, author diff)

Changed: 1,44c1
James Tiptree, Jr was the
[pen name]? of science fiction author Alice Sheldon (1915-1987). She also wrote under the pseudonym "Raccoona Sheldon".
Sometime painter, graphic artist, and art critic.

:Born: (date), 1915, (place)
:Died: May 19, 1987, Maclean, Virginia
:Married: to William Davey 1934-1941; to Huntington Sheldon 1945 until her death.

Served in Air Intelligence in US Army 1942-1946, retired with rank of Major.
Worked at the CIA 1952-1955.
B.A. from [American University]?, 1959. Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology, [George Washington University]?, 1967.

First sale "The Lucky Ones" to New Yorker magazine 1946.

Won the Nebula award for her grisly little novella, "The Screwfly Solution"

Sheldon adopted the pseudonym of James Tiptree, Jr. in 1968 because "I was tired of always being the first woman in some damn profession..." The imposture was successful until the late 1970's, possibly aided by a misunderstanding that it was intended to protect the professional reputation of an intelligence community official.

When asked for biographical details, Tiptree was forthcoming in everything but gender. Many of the details given above (the Air Force career, the Ph.D.) were mentioned in letters she wrote. Readers were permitted to assume gender, and invariably they assumed "male".

When all was revealed, two prominent science fiction writers suffered some embarassment. [Robert Silverberg]? had written an introduction to Warm Worlds and Otherwise, arguing on the basis of selections from stories in the collection, that Tiptree could not possibly be a woman. Ursula K. Le Guin had prevented Tiptree from adding "his" signature to a petition by female science fiction authors, believing Tiptree to be a man. Both acted understandably under the circumstances, and both felt compelled to defend their positions later in print.

Sheldon continued writing under the Tiptree pen name for another decade. On May 19, 1987, Sheldon took the life of her invalid husband, and then took her own. They were found dead, hand in hand in bed, in their home.

There is a James Tiptree Junior Award given in her honor each year, fundraising typically done by bake sale among other things.

Novels




*Up the Walls of the World
*Star Songs of an Old Primate
*Brightness Falls From the Air

Short story collections




*Ten Thousand Light-Years from Home (1973)
*Warm Worlds and Otherwise (1975)
*Out of the Everywhere and Other Extraordinary Visions




"On James Tiptree, Alice Sheldon and bake sales", by Karen Joy Fowler http://www.scifi.com/sfw/issue22/tiptree.html



/Talk?
#REDIRECT James Tiptree, Jr

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