Transgender Sci-Fi "Triton" by Samuel R. Delany, Signed First Edition 1976
First Edition
[African American][LGBTQ][Sci-Fi Literature] Delany, Samuel R. Triton. New York: Bantam Books, 1976. First edition. Signed by the author on dedication page "Samuel R. Delany Amherst '91". A work of queer science fiction by one of the most significant African American science fiction writers of the 20th century. Triton is an essential exploration of gender variance, social structure, and identity. Published in the wake of Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Left Hand of Darkness (1969), Delany’s novel offers a pointed, subversive response, deepening the exploration of gender nonconformity by imagining a society where gender and sexual identities are not only fluid but technologically alterable.Set on the anarchic, post-capitalist moon colony of Triton, the novel follows Bron Helstrom, a misfit and self-styled dissident whose inability to conform becomes a lens through which Delany critiques heteronormative power structures. As Bron undergoes elective gender reassignment surgery the novel dismantles essentialist notions of gender and challenges the fantasy of liberation without introspection. Unlike Le Guin’s speculative treatment of androgyny through a unified race, Delany, himself a gay Black writer and theorist, constructs a fractal, intersectional society where race, sexuality, gender, and desire constantly shift. Triton does not offer utopia but instead asks: who is truly capable of freedom, and at what personal cost? The book stands at the intersection of New Wave science fiction and early queer theory, anticipating themes that would later define trans and nonbinary narratives in speculative literature. Toning and spotting to inner wrappers and end pages. Overall very good condition. A signed first edition of Delany’s politically radical, philosophically rich, and narratively transgressive vision of queerness and selfhood.
Item #22392
Price: $350.00
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