lightreads: a partial image of a etymology tree for the Indo-European word 'leuk done in white neon on black'; in the lower left is (Default)
lightreads ([personal profile] lightreads) wrote2018-11-18 12:20 pm

The Flowers of Vashnoi by Lois Mcmaster Bujold

The Flowers of Vashnoi

2/5. Ekaterin is involved in an experimental project to try and cleanse the radioactive site where the Cetagandans dropped a dirty bomb decades ago. This unearths an ugly secret.

Hm. This is a good idea done without much of the richness I was expecting. This is a story that, by its shape, literally goes to the radioactive heart of this culture's ableism. Most of the story is set on the bomb site which started this supposed deep-rooted phobia of mutation. And yet it somehow manages to not … really … be about that? And I'm not sure how? Partly it's that Ekaterin drives this story, rather than Miles, though Miles is the one who personally owns the site and whose personal baggage re disability it encapsulates. That's fine – and it makes sense – but Ekaterin has basically nothing to say about disability or this culture's view of it that I found interesting or illuminating.

Also, here's my real problem. This story posits as a matter of course that naturally people stopped abandoning their disabled infants to die in a radioactive hellscape when they got access to healthcare. And I just, lol. That is so naïve it is laughable to me. As if the problem was that a kid with six fingers couldn't be fixed. Instead of the problem being what birthing a six fingered child was supposed to say about the parents. That is the route of the phobia – dissent of unfitness. Being able to medically address disability won't magically address that phobia. In fact, it would be another pain point, as it would involve outsiders, authorities, gossip, speculation, etc. And the thing I really don't get is that LMB knows this, specifically. Or at least she did, as it was a major plot point in Komarr.

So would getting access to better care decrease the number of parental murders of disabled kids? Yes. Would it eliminate them? Don't make me laugh. Go on, google the rolls of the dead project a friend did years ago, compiling the hundreds upon hundreds of news articles discussing the parental murder of disabled children in the U.S. and, more often than not, excusing the parent. If you can stomach it. My friend had to stop collating these stories as it was becoming too traumatizing.

So yeah. I don't think this story is being honest about what ableism is and how it functions and how you combat it. And it feels that way – dishonest – rather than merely ignorant.

Content notes: Infanticide; child abandonment; attempted murder; ableism everywhere.

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