slyc_willie
Captain Crash
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2006
- Posts
- 17,732
I've had this idea for a novel for quite a while now, at least a good two or three years. It sort of popped into my head while watching Logan's Run one night, and has simmered on the back burner of my brain since then. Over the last few weeks, however, it has jumped to the forefront and begun to really boil.
The basic premise is of an enclosed, self-sufficient society in the relatively near future. Say, a few generations from now. The background is that at some point in the 21st century, there was an epidemic that wiped out the majority of the human population. The trick is that it was only transmuted through heterosexual sex. Obviously, those who survived were mainly gays and lesbians.
I bet you can see where this is going already.
Jump forward a good three or four generations. Imagine a large city-state totally closed off from the outside world, a sort of Utopian society a la Logan's Run or Brave New World. Through whatever means, everyone is provided for as far as food, luxury, entertainment, comfortable living conditions, etc., are concerned. The only hitch is that homosexuality is mandated by the government, and hetereosexual relations are criminal, punishable by death.
The essential story involves character A, a man, and character B, a woman. Both happily content with their existence and positions in society (I'm thinking of making A a history teacher and B some kind of engineer -- their occupations will be important to both explain the culture in which they live as well as assist them later on in the story), they nevertheless find themselves inordinately attracted to one another. In time, they fall in love and begin a hidden relationship, which eventually compels them to escape.
I've discussed this idea with several straight and gay friends I work with, and they all agree it's an interesting premise. The SO brought up a good point, however, when she mentioned that some readers, primarily gay and lesbians may view it as some kind of hidden denouncement of homosexuals.
Somehow, I don't think a simple disclaimer ("This is a work of visionary fiction. It is not a diatribe against homosexuality") would be enough, however, to quell such reactions. It is more about the dangers inherent when any government attempts to regulate a private citizen's sexuality or sexual practices.
By the end of the story, of course, the hunted lovers escape (or do they? I haven't figured that part out yet) despite everything their oppressive government tries to stop them. Along the way, many friends get hurt or even killed protecting them.
So, what I want to pick your brains about is how I could go about representing the government as being oppressive and dominating without making it a negative tie-in to homosexuality. Or am I just going to have to weather the negative feedback from those who won't catch my original meaning?
The basic premise is of an enclosed, self-sufficient society in the relatively near future. Say, a few generations from now. The background is that at some point in the 21st century, there was an epidemic that wiped out the majority of the human population. The trick is that it was only transmuted through heterosexual sex. Obviously, those who survived were mainly gays and lesbians.
I bet you can see where this is going already.
Jump forward a good three or four generations. Imagine a large city-state totally closed off from the outside world, a sort of Utopian society a la Logan's Run or Brave New World. Through whatever means, everyone is provided for as far as food, luxury, entertainment, comfortable living conditions, etc., are concerned. The only hitch is that homosexuality is mandated by the government, and hetereosexual relations are criminal, punishable by death.
The essential story involves character A, a man, and character B, a woman. Both happily content with their existence and positions in society (I'm thinking of making A a history teacher and B some kind of engineer -- their occupations will be important to both explain the culture in which they live as well as assist them later on in the story), they nevertheless find themselves inordinately attracted to one another. In time, they fall in love and begin a hidden relationship, which eventually compels them to escape.
I've discussed this idea with several straight and gay friends I work with, and they all agree it's an interesting premise. The SO brought up a good point, however, when she mentioned that some readers, primarily gay and lesbians may view it as some kind of hidden denouncement of homosexuals.
Somehow, I don't think a simple disclaimer ("This is a work of visionary fiction. It is not a diatribe against homosexuality") would be enough, however, to quell such reactions. It is more about the dangers inherent when any government attempts to regulate a private citizen's sexuality or sexual practices.
By the end of the story, of course, the hunted lovers escape (or do they? I haven't figured that part out yet) despite everything their oppressive government tries to stop them. Along the way, many friends get hurt or even killed protecting them.
So, what I want to pick your brains about is how I could go about representing the government as being oppressive and dominating without making it a negative tie-in to homosexuality. Or am I just going to have to weather the negative feedback from those who won't catch my original meaning?