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Science fiction -
Science fiction is a genre of fiction dealing with imaginary but
more or less plausible (or at least non-supernatural) content such
as future settings, futuristic
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vThe literature of change
It's often said that Science Fiction is the literature of
change. When a culture is undergoing a lot of changes due to
scientific advances and technological developments, and expects
to undergo more, it's hardly surprising if stories about these
changes become popular as a way of expressing people's feelings
(optimistic or otherwise) about change. Note that the changes
may be in our ability to control the world, or just in our
understanding of it. For example, some "post-holocaust" stories,
such as Wyndham's The Chrysalids (also known as Rebirth),
portray cultures that understand and control less of the world
than we do; the scientific element consists of our understanding
of their world, and of how it arose out of our world. Other
stories offer future technologies that we can hope for based on
present-day science, but haven't developed yet, such as
fusion-powered spaceships. Yet others go beyond this to dazzle
us with future science that differs from what is now believed,
but they retain some recognisable elements of the world we live
in, so we can at least believe that the world depicted in the
story might some day come to be.
This leads up to my loose definition of ScF as fiction set in a
world that differs from our everyday world in a way that
importantly involves science or technology. Some people add that
ScF should make you think about possible future worlds and
alternatives thereto, but I'm quite glad to have some fiction
that's purely entertainment. If history is any guide, there will
always be plenty of ScF that asks questions (and usually
supplies ready-made answers) about changes in the world and the
futures to which they may lead.
About a year after inscribing the above onto my hard disk, I was
reading an introduction by Isaac Asimov to a novel by a younger
author and found this:
A science fiction story must be set against a society
significantly diferent from our own -- usually, but not
necessarily, bcause of some change in the level of science and
technology -- or it is not a science fiction story.
He was contrasting ScF with detective stories, where criminals
are caught and order is restored:
... the science fiction story destroys our own comfortable
society. The science fiction story does not deal with the
restoration of order, but with change and, ideally, with
continuing change ... we leave our society and never return to
it.
The literature of science
Another widely-held view is that ScF is fiction that describes
the impact of science or technology on people. To the extent
that its readers are "science buffs" (never mind whether they
know any science!), this may well be the chief reason they enjoy
reading it. Its heroes are often those who understand the
science or technology, which can add an element of
wish-fulfillment. It can also contribute to the ghastly
stereotype of the ScF reader as someone with no accomplishment
or merit other other than science, and no interest in the impact
of art on people, or for that matter of people on people. For my
opinion of this definition, see below.
Serdar Yegulalp suggests
A kind of fiction that could only result from a
scientifically-influenced worldview.
Short & to the point. It covers explicitly technological SF, and
also stuff like Phil Dick and even Thomas Pynchon....
I like this one, though it has to be read carefully. It's also
rather flexible, depending on what you regard as a scientific
influence on your view of the world; which is probably a point
in its favour.
A teaching aid
It is strongly rumoured that Heinlein wrote his "juvenile"
novels partly with the intention of inspiring his young readers
to take an interest in science and technology. I also rather
enjoyed this page where David DeGraff describes his success in
using short ScF stories to help teach introductory astronomy.
ScF and non-speculative genres
Aside: the "sf" in rec.arts.sf.written stands for Speculative
Fiction, covering (at least) science fiction, fantasy, and
alternative history.
Damon Knight and Tom Shippey offer interesting observations
about how ScF relates to fiction in general and to "pastoral"
fiction.
Satires: Laputa and Erewhon
There is a centuries-old tradition whereby authors who have
something really pungent to say about the society in which they
are living will present their criticism as a work of fiction,
ostensibly about another society living in a remote place to
which the protagonist is somehow transported. Is this kind of
thing science fiction? When I was too young to see through the
veil of fiction to the kernel of satire, I used to read it
eagerly. Certainly most of it is about worlds that differ from
ours, but only to the extent necessary to make the author's
point, and sometimes by a simple reversal: in Erewhon, Butler
depicts people being punished if they have a cold or a fever,
and attended by a doctor if they defraud someone. These days I
find it hard to see much of either science or fiction in such
works, though I find them much funnier than I did as a child.
OTOH there's a fine line between satire disguised as ScF and
fiction which tries to show how society could change radically
if the rest of the world changed just a little (a playful
example is Edmund Cooper's Five to Twelve). By my definition
above, the latter is genuine ScF.
High-tech fiction
People have argued whether books like Clancy's The Hunt for Red
October are ScF. Undeniably they describe the impact of
technologies on people, and the technologies are not the ones
found in my everyday world. OTOH these technologies do exist
now, and are part of the everyday worlds of people like the
characters in the books (e.g. military personnel). Thus they
fall outside my definition of ScF but within some others. I feel
safe in claiming that they are not much more speculative than
the average detective story. And after all, there are a fair
number of Westerns that describe the impact of steam train
technology on people who used to ride horses; does this make
them into science fiction?
Authors' and critics' opinions
Neyir Cenk Gokce has compiled an excellent list of short
definitions of ScF given by authors (and by some people whose
names I don't recognise). I rather like the one by Pohl. I've
put a few longer definitions that I found interesting onto a
sub-page.
Another such list can be found at Magic Dragon, who also has a
link back to this site, so it seems only fair that I should link
to his.
... and an anti-definition of my own
Here's something which I used to attribute to Heinlein. I
couldn't find it in his essay RayGuns and Rocket Ships
(collected in Expanded Universe), though. I'm indebted to Peter
Knutsen for pointing out that it appears in Bova's Challenges in
an article entitled Science in Science Fiction. It's this: a
work shouldn't count as ScF unless the science is necessary to
it. This takes aim at the many stories where, if you replaced
the spaceships with covered wagons, the green skins with red
ones, and the lasers with six-shooters, nobody could distinguish
the resulting epic from a (usually rather poorly-written)
Western. Indeed, I like to call such stories "Mars Westerns".
They are just adventure stories (or romance novels, or ...) with
high-tech props, resembling science fiction the way Hamlet
resembles a history of Denmark. Given their resemblance to the
subset of "historical fiction" that is just present-day fiction
in an exotic setting, perhaps they could be called "future
fiction"; I've also heard "space fantasy" and "space opera" used
to refer to something similar. They have one thing in common
with Gulliver's Travels: they are not really about a world that
differs from the one we live in. v |
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