Science Fiction and the Prediction of the Future: Essays on Foresight and Fallacy
Edited by Gary Westfahl, Wong Kin Yuen and Amy Kit-sze Chan
Series Editors Donald E. Palumbo and C.W. Sullivan III
Print ISBN: 978-0-7864-5841-7
EBook ISBN: 978-0-7864-8476-8
bibliographies, index
271pp. softcover 2011
Price: $35.00
About the Book
Science fiction has always challenged readers with depictions of the future. Can the genre actually provide glimpses of the world of tomorrow? This collection of fifteen international and interdisciplinary essays examines the genre’s predictions and breaks new ground by considering the prophetic functions of science fiction films as well as SF literature. Among the texts and topics examined are classic stories by Murray Leinster, C. L. Moore, and Cordwainer Smith; 2001: A Space Odyssey and its sequels, Japanese anime and Hong Kong cinema; and electronic fiction.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Of Futures Imagined, and Futures Inhabited
GARY WESTFAHL 1
I. Cosmic Visions
1. Pitfalls of Prophecy: Why Science Fiction So Often Fails to Predict the Future
GARY WESTFAHL 9
2. Emotional Dimensions of Transmimetic Fiction: Emotion, Aesthetics, Ethics, and Rhetoric in Tales of Tomorrow’s
Science, Technology, and Technoscience
RICHARD L. MCKINNEY 23
3. The Internet and the Anagogical Myths of Science Fiction
KIRK HAMPTON AND CAROL MACKAY 41
4. Technobodies and the Anxieties of Performance
VERONICA HOLLINGER 52
5. Places of Alterity in Science Fiction
RICHARD L. MCKINNEY 64
II. The Practice of Prophecy
6. Future City Toyko: 1909 and 2009
SHARALYN ORBAUGH 84
7. Rebooting “A Logic Named Joe”: Exploring the Multiple Influences of a Strangely Predictive Mid–1940s Short Story
DAVID L. FERRO AND ERIC G. SWEDIN 104
8. Victims of a Globalized, Radicalized, Technologized World, or, Why the Beatles Needed Help!
LYNNE LUNDQUIST 120
9. “A Journey Beyond the Stars”: 2001: A Space Odyssey and the Psychedelic Revolution in 1960s Science Fiction
ROB LATHAM 128
10. The Endless Odyssey: The 2001 Saga and Its Inability to Predict Humanity’s Future
GARY WESTFAHL 135
11. Intercultural and Interface: Kung Fu as Abstract Machine
WONG KIN YUEN 171
12. Post-Genre Cinemas and Post-Colonial Attitude: Hong Kong Meets Paris
VÉRONIQUE FLAMBARD-WEISBART 189
13. Writing, Weaving, and Technology
AMY KIT-SZE CHAN 198
14. The Technological Contours of Contemporary Science Fiction, or, The Science Fiction That Science Fiction Doesn’t See
BROOKS LANDON 213
15. Thinking About the Smart Wireless World
GREGORY BENFORD 220
Bibliography of Works Related to Science Fiction and the Prediction of the Future 229
Bibliography of Other Works Cited in the Text 241
About the Contributors 253
Index 255
About the Author
Gary Westfahl teaches at the University of California, Riverside. A prolific writer and editor, he earned the Science Fiction Research Association’s Pilgrim Award for his lifetime contributions to science fiction and fantasy scholarship.
Wong Kin Yuen is the chair of the English department at Hong Kong Shue Yen University and has published broadly on science fiction.
Amy Kit-sze Chan teaches English at Hong Shue Yen University and has published numerous articles on women’s issues and cultural studies.
Donald E. Palumbo is a professor of English at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina. He lives in Greenville.
C.W. Sullivan III is a professor of arts and sciences at East Carolina University and a full member of the Welsh Academy. He is the author of numerous books and the on-line journal Celtic Cultural Studies.
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