L. Taylor Hansen
{{short description|American writer (1897–1976)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2014}}
{{Infobox writer
|name = Lucile Taylor Hansen
|image =
|birth_date = {{birth date|1897|11|30}}
|birth_place =
|death_date = {{dda|1976|05||1897|11|30}}
|death_place = Phoenix, Arizona, U.S.
|occupation = Writer
}}
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Lucile Taylor Hansen (November 30, 1897 – May 1976) was an American writer of science fiction and popular science articles and books who used a male writing persona for the early part of her career when published as L. Taylor Hansen. She is the author of eight short stories, nearly sixty nonfiction articles popularizing anthropology and geology, and three nonfiction books.
Early life
An autobiographical sketch by Hansen begins with her memory of staying with her parents in an abandoned fort after the "Indian Wars." In 1919, she writes, she was initiated into an Ojibwe tribe after she suggested to the tribe that they not kill the agency doctor but instead protest his appointment to Washington administrators. She then enters into a lifelong project to study of Native American legends.
She attended classes at the University of California, Los Angeles during the 1920s but did not receive a degree.{{cite book|last1=Bleiler|first1=Everett Franklin|title=Science-Fiction: The Gernsback Years|date=1998|publisher=Kent State University Press|isbn=0-87338-604-3|page=168|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PbMdeizaCNcC&q=%22L.+Taylor+Hansen%22+degree&pg=PA168}}{{cite book|last1=Davin|first1=Eric Leif|title=Partners in Wonder: Women and the Birth of Science Fiction, 1926-1965|date=2005|publisher=Lexington Books|isbn=978-0-7391-1267-0|page=385|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZoNDebTvUnsC&q=Hansen++&pg=PA118}}
Science
Starting with the September 1941 issue of Amazing, Hansen wrote "Scientific Mysteries," a regular column of non-fiction articles that continued until 1948. Combined with her other non-fiction articles, she wrote nearly sixty articles during this period, appearing from five to twelve times per year. Her first article picks up on the work of her father regarding the continental drift. She reviews criticisms of the theory and presents evidence that supports it, such as geologic continuities and homologous species that appear on different continents. She presents a field of researchers working together so that "the veils of mystery are being pushed back from the library which is the past."Hansen, L. Taylor. "Gondwanaland, the Mystery Continent of the Past." Amazing Stories, September 1941, p. 133. Hansen credits this series of articles as being the start of her investigation of how the different stories of the Americas might have some common origins.{{citation needed|date= November 2022}}
Hansen did not shy away from the controversial issues surrounding anthropology as the last vestiges of scientific racism fell away in the years before World War II. A July 1942 article, for instance, asserts that contemporary "standards of color are far too superficial." She points out that the skull shape of the Mayans, which would have supported the craniometric proposition that races differ culturally because of their distinctive skull geometries, does not "affect their intelligence." While she reports on findings that are now discredited, such as the idea that the population of Africa is a recently evolved type, she is remarkable for suggesting that Africans are not primitive but more evolved than other human types.Hansen, L. Taylor. "The White Race—Does It Exist?", Amazing Stories, July 1942, p. 211.
Later, Hansen begins experimenting with pseudonyms. The article "America's Mysterious Race of Indian Giants" appeared in the December 1946 issue of Amazing, and while the writing style was "recognizable as that of columnist L. Taylor Hansen," it was credited to "Chief Sequoyah."Professor Solomon, Visitors to the Inner Earth. Top Hat Press, 2011, p. 67. A second story by Chief Sequoyah, "Spirit of the Serpent God," appeared in the June 1948 issue of Amazing. The story "The Fire-Trail," credited to a Navaho Oge-Make, appeared in the January 1948 issue of Amazing. She also credited a second story to Oge-Make, "Tribal Memories of the Flying Saucers," that appeared in another magazine Palmer edited, Fate, in the September 1949 issue.
As she completed her survey of Native American legends, Hansen published three nonfiction books. The first, Some Considerations of and Additions to the Taylor-Wegener Hypothesis of Continental Displacement (1946), details the elaboration of the continental drift theory proposed by Frank Bursley Taylor. Her second book, He Walked the Americas (1963), is a frequently cited taxonomy of Native American legends that report of a light-skinned prophet. Her last book, The Ancient Atlantic (1969), surveys the culture and geography of the Atlantic Ocean and touches on the legend of Atlantis.{{citation needed|date= November 2022}}
Hansen wrote the book He Walked the Americas in 1963.L. Taylor Hansen, He walked the Americas, Amherst Press, 1963 In the book drawing from Native American legends, folklore and mythology discussed that a "White Prophet" had visited many different parts of America.[https://books.google.com/books?id=Eh1WHqo0JN8C&dq=he+walked+the+americas&pg=PA245 Taylor discussed in Lost Cities of North and Central America By David Hatcher Childress] Some Mormons have used this book as evidence supporting the Book of Mormon, which depicts Christianity practiced in the ancient Americas, including a visitation of the resurrected Jesus Christ.{{cite book | author=Waylon Gary White Deer | title=Touched by Thunder | publisher=Routledge | year=2016 | page=76 | isbn=9781315416649 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jvVmDAAAQBAJ&q=%22he+walked+the+americas%22&pg=PA76 | accessdate=2018-01-31}}{{cite book | author=Rex E. Lee | title=What Do Mormons Believe? | publisher=Deseret Book | year=1992 | page=117}}{{cite thesis | author=Dee Lufkin Risenmay | title=A Study of the Subject-Matter Preparation of Full-Time Teachers in the Seminaries of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints | type=MRE thesis | publisher=Brigham Young University | year=1968 | page=69 | url=https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/5077/ | accessdate=2018-01-31}}Michael W. Hickenbotham, Answering Challenging Mormon Questions, p. 204{{Cite web|url=http://mindlight.info/maitreya/bswalkam.htm|title = He walked the Americas}}
Science fiction
File:L Taylor Hansen fake WS3010.jpg in 1930]]
While Hansen's science fiction career was brief, she was one of the first women in a genre dominated by male authors. Her first story, "What the Sodium Lines Revealed," appeared in Hugo Gernsback's Amazing Stories Quarterly in the Winter 1929 issue. This story, while a Gernsback-era adventure, hinges upon scientific ideas in that a message is detected in a spectrograph by an amateur astronomer.Hansen, L. Taylor. "What the Sodium Lines Revealed." Amazing Stories Quarterly, Winter 1929. That same year, her second story "The Undersea Tube," details an underground civilization that is uncovered while developing a pneumatic commuter train between New York and Liverpool.Hansen, L. Taylor. "The Undersea Tube." Amazing Stories, November 1929.
Eric Leif Davin reports that L. Taylor Hansen was apparently the only female science fiction author of the era who actively concealed her sex.Davin, Eric Leif. Partners in Wonder: Women and the Birth of Science Fiction, 1926–1965. New York: Lexington Books, 2006. The subterfuge was extensive. An illustration of a young man, purportedly Hansen, appeared with Hansen's fifth story, "The City on the Cloud."Hansen, L. Taylor. "The City on the Cloud." Wonder Stories, October 1930, p. 429. Hansen continued the subterfuge by asserting on the telephone to fan Forrest J. Ackerman that she was not the author of her stories but only handled them for her brother.Bleiler, Everett Franklin. Science-Fiction: The Gernsback Years, p. 169. Jane Donawerth suggests that Hansen's creation of a world-traveled, male brother was a "probably social crisis" in that she did not want to violate the convention of a male narrator in science fiction and so her persona allows her to "protect herself from social disapproval."Donawerth, Jane. Frankenstein's Daughters: Women Writing Science Fiction, p. 114.
However, as reported by Davin, the facts of the encounter between Ackerman and Hansen are somewhat contradictory.Davin, p. 116 A letter from Hansen was titled "L. Taylor Hansen Defends Himself" in the July 1943 issue of Amazing Stories, but Davin asserts this is because she was a private person and not because she was trying to maintain credibility. The editor, Raymond A. Palmer, had "little trouble working with women" as evinced by the many women who were published in Amazing during the 1940s.Davin, p. 115
Bibliography
- What the Sodium Lines Revealed, Amazing Stories Quarterly (Winter 1929)
- The Undersea Tube, Amazing Stories (November 1929)
- The City on the Cloud
- Lords of the Underworld, Amazing Stories (April 1941)
- Some Considerations of and Additions to the Taylor-Wegener Hypothesis of Continental Displacement (1946)
- He Walked the Americas (1963)
- The Ancient Atlantic (1969)
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{Gutenberg author | id=32793}}
- {{Internet Archive author |sname=Lucile Taylor Hansen}}
- {{Librivox author |id=13391}}
- {{isfdb name|id=1281|name=L. Taylor Hansen}}
{{Authority control}}
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Category:American science fiction writers
Category:American women short story writers
Category:20th-century American women writers
Category:American women science fiction and fantasy writers
Category:American cultural anthropologists
Category:American women anthropologists
Category:Women in the United States Army
Category:American pseudoarchaeologists
Category:Pseudonymous women writers
Category:American women novelists
Category:20th-century American novelists
Category:20th-century American short story writers