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| resident pedantissimo | Is there a future for science fiction? Is there a future for science fiction? The passing of Arthur C Clarke has left many of science fiction's devotees in funereal mode: Asimov's gone, Heinlein's gone, Vonnegut too. With other titans such as Ray Bradbury and Ursula LeGuin not getting any younger, a collective sigh for giants passed has heaved through the blogosphere: who, now, can take the helm of Starship SF? Well, lots of people actually - though in keeping with the genre's traditions, it is undergoing some unexpected mutations, and there are at least two very different horizons ahead. Look in one direction and you can see writers splintering the genre into ever more specific niches, with correspondingly smaller readerships. Wikipedia lists 43 sub-genres of science fiction (for reasons as obscure as the mechanics of time travel, you must never call it sci-fi if you're talking to a fan), and there will probably be more by next week. For those who like stories about underground groups doing battle with sinister megacorporations, there's biopunk. This is not to be confused with clockpunk, which considers the impact modern technologies would have had if they had been invented earlier. Bronzepunk and stonepunk have some similarities, but don't whatever you do give a clockpunk fan a space opera or a sword'n'planet as an Easter present. Swing your scope around towards the mass market, however, and something like the Invasion of the Mainstream is under way. Where previously SF existed in its own universe, little visited by general readers, it is now taking over large stretches of Waterstone's shelves. Until recently, a science fiction novel would never have made the Booker shortlist. These days the literati are forever zooming back and forth in time (Will Self and David Mitchell two recent adventurers) and fiddling around in the laboratory (Margaret Atwood and Kazuo Ishiguro). "I don't pretend we have all the answers," Arthur C Clarke once wrote. "But the questions are certainly worth thinking about." These days, it seems, all of us are doing so. Lindesay Irvine (The Guardian) |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| The Cat Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Malaysia
Posts: 3,292
| Re: Is there a future for science fiction? Meowrr ... am using Chris's masheen and of course it auto logged in to his account. And since my masheens auto log in to my account it didn't occur to me to wonder how I could just get right in here. So the above post is mine really and I am now logged in myself. |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Red Rane Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Greater Manchester
Posts: 3,342
| Re: Is there a future for science fiction? Bah. I don't see it. All genres evolve. Sure, it's a shame that some really great authors are no longer with us, but that doesn't mean the genre is dying. Is the article implying that "Where previously SF existed in its own universe, little visited by general readers, it is now taking over large stretches of Waterstone's shelves." is a bad thing? I don't see it. |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Bearly Believable Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: UK: ENGLAND:
Posts: 12,060
| Re: Is there a future for science fiction? I have been led to understand that a certain Mr W. Shakespeare is no longer with us; other people still seem to want to write plays, including tragedies, comedies and even histories. (And hasn't that clever Sr da Vinci also passed his best and yet painting - and even inventing - go on in the hands of others.) |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| I write SF. SF is cool. Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Maryland
Posts: 512
| Re: Is there a future for science fiction? I agree with Rane. SF is simply evolving... and at the moment, with the "apparent" splintering of genres (hey, when was SF ever all the same-type stories by different artists?), the evolution of delivery mediums (the web, e-books, CD and DVD), and the changes of society that are catching up with many of the older SF concepts, it's hard to see where SF is going right now. SF has gone through phases before, and re-invented itself each time. Metropolis begat the Buck Rodgers serials, begat Forbidden Planet, begat Star Trek, begat The Andromeda Strain, begat The Prisoner, begat Soylent Green, begat The Matrix, begat Firefly... each as different as the last. I think we're at the tail-end of a declining phase right now, so we just have to wait for the next phase (or create it ourselves). |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: Vatican City
Posts: 1,144
| Re: Is there a future for science fiction? All genres have subgenres, you'll find the same in mystery, romance and literary. The above is a simplistic assessment drawn from an insufficent understanding of a journalist, who because of recent novels in sff from "literary" authors is forced to try and understand. So in a half-assed way to make a story, or a point, she says SF is either internally ghettoised, or (and don't worry) it'll be saved by literary authors. She doesn't know the works of current sf authors, hence they don't get mentioned. Clearly her editor gave her an assignment that was either beyond her, or she couldn't be bothered doing any research. (Hence the half-read, half-digested gunk from Wiki). |
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Sweden
Posts: 7,997
| Re: Is there a future for science fiction? I dont believe its dying at all. There are too many skilled authors writing the genre today. I do sometimes wish though there were more writers that could make you feel for a SF book like you do with a good RAH,PKD etc I havent read a modern writer that comes near that. Thats only natural it doesnt mean the genre is dying, it means the genre has more greats in its history than in many other genres. |
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| | #8 (permalink) | |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 13,183
| Re: Is there a future for science fiction? Ummm, guys... did anyone actually read the post? Quote:
![]() Yes, it points out the bewildering number of categories within the genre, and that some of these have very narrow audiences... but this is at most handled as a point of mild concern. The thrust of the whole, on the other hand, shows me an awareness that sf is becoming more viable as literature outside fandom as well as in. Look at the thing again, especially the line from Clarke and the closing by the reporter. That by itself should tell you that sf is being seen here as, if anything, a more vital genre than ever.... | |
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| Senior Member Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 1,846
| Re: Is there a future for science fiction? Quote:
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| Axes and Saws Prohibited Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: Mississippi
Posts: 1,770
| Re: Is there a future for science fiction? My question is of a more mundane nature. How is it that Nesa is able to appropriate Chris' computer all the way from Malaysia while Chris resides in Switzerland? Perhaps this is simply one more example of the awesome power of the felines. Upon further reflection there is most likely some extremely interesting sci-fi explanation for that which will no doubt be revealed shortly. Last edited by the smiling weirwood; 3rd April 2008 at 02:29 AM. Reason: revelations |
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| | #11 (permalink) |
| Ubi amici, ibi opes... Join Date: Jul 2005 Location: Southampton
Posts: 7,890
| Re: Is there a future for science fiction? As I understand it, Nesa went to a TravelAgent booth, bought a "tikket" which entitled her to a place in a giant aluminium flying machine, called, probably, a "BOE'ING", which whisked her half way around the world in less than a day to the Fabled City Of Lon-Don (in a sub-Orbital flight)to attend the Grand Conclave of Fandom known to the wise as "Eastercon"...on the return, she broke her journey at the Neutral Zone of Swit-Zer-Land to confer with the Most Puissant Overlord of Pedantism himself! |
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| | #13 (permalink) |
| Ubi amici, ibi opes... Join Date: Jul 2005 Location: Southampton
Posts: 7,890
| Re: Is there a future for science fiction? Sorry, SW, no intention whatsoever to be snide...I was responding in what I thought was an appropriately "Sci-fi" way to your post...including a smiley. No offence at all intended. My apologies. |
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| The Enigma of Steel | Re: Is there a future for science fiction? Yes, please put away the katana... and the phasor. Let's keep it civil. Seriously, two quick points: First the world tends to overclassify nowadays, hence the many sub-genre and second, some form of Science Fiction will exist as long as humankind has any sort of curiosity about its future or surroundings. |
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