When Science Fiction Grew Up - by Ted Gioia
When Science Fiction Grew Up - by Ted Gioia
When Science Fiction Grew Up - by Ted Gioia
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conceptual fiction
Exploring the Non-Realist Tradition in Fiction
by Ted Gioia
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1.
Science fiction finally gave up childish things in the 1960s.
But like many adolescents, it only grew up because the
ugly real world intruded on its immature fantasies.
Let's put a measuring tape to it. In the summer of 1957,
just a few weeks before the launch of the first Sputnik
space satellite, some 23 science fiction magazines
were operating in the United States. By the end of 1960,
only six remained. During a period of just 28 months,
fifteen sci-fi magazines disappeared from the magazine
racks.
This truly was an amazing story, astounding even, but
did not get reported in the pages of Amazing Stories
and Astounding Storiestwo of the survivors. (Although
Astounding, in a move that now seems especially
wrong-headed, changed its name to Analogclearly
missing out on the coming digital age.) These pulp
fiction stragglers were too busy trying to stay alive.
Even the survivors in this shakeout were on a flimsy
financial footing, and many a sci-fi writer rushed to the
bank to cash a payment check before another magazine
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4 Solaris (1961)
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Finnegans Wake is an
information pool based
So many ironies here. The space age had arrived, and
on computer memory
the rivalry between the US and the USSR promised to
systems
that these
didn't exist
validate all the outlandish future-tripping forecasts
until
after
pulp magazines had been peddling for the
pastcenturies
thirty
years. It didn't seem fair that workaday journalists
should era,"
James Joyce's
now steal away their readers. But who
needed
Satellite
Philip
K. Dick
declared.
magazine (defunct 1959) or Space Travel (defunct 1958),
Then he added: "I'll be
when you could read about actual satellites and space
travel in your daily newspaper? Who wantedfamous
to spendforever."
leisure time reading tales about
thermonuclear destruction
when the neighbor next door
was setting up an actual
bomb shelter in his basement?
But the irony also played
out on a grander karmic level:
what cruel deity had decided
that purveyors of fantasy
should get a dose of
reality therapyforced into
retreat because truth was
stranger than even science
fiction.
2.
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Stanislaw Lem
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Stanislaw Lem claimed that science fiction is poorly written,
www.twitter.com/tedgioia
ill conceived and too focused on clichs. That didn't stop him
from writing one of the finest sci-fi books of the 20th century.
Special Features
Notes
on Conceptual
To read
more, clickFiction
here
When Science Fiction Grew Up
Ray Bradbury: A Tribute
The Year of Magical Reading
5 Stranger in
a Leiber
Strange Land (1961)
Remembering
Fritz
Robert
A
TributeHeinlein
to Richard Matheson
Samuel Delany's 70th birthday
Two Sci-Fi
years after
his Vonnegut
Starship Troopers incurred charges that
The
of Kurt
he wasYou,
a militarist,
Heinlein served up Stranger in a Strange
Curse
Neil Armstrong!
Land, with
its paean
to free love and 1960s-era self-actualization.
Robert
Heinlein
at 100
A.E, van Vogt Tribute
The
Puzzling
Case
of Robert
To read
more
click
here Sheckley
The Avant-Garde Sci-Fi of Brian Aldiss
Science Fiction 1958-1975: A Reading List
Links
to related sites
William Burroughs
Disclosure:
Conceptual Fiction
and its(1962)
sister
7 A Clockwork
Orange
sites may receive review copies and
Anthony
Burgess
promotional materials from publishers,
authors, publicists or other parties.
Long before the rise of the punk ethos, Burgess anticipated its
themes of violent disenchantment and transformed them into
a magnificent sci-fi-flavored literary symphony.
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9 Hothouse (1962)
Brian Aldiss
Is Brian Aldiss's global warming novel really science fiction?
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12 Cosmicomics (1965)
Italo Calvino
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14 Dune (1965)
Frank Herbert
Frank Herbert's Dune represents the purest example in science
fiction of what anthropologist Clifford Geertz described as
"thick description" ethnography.
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15 Mindswap (1965)
Robert Sheckley
Is Robert Sheckley's 1965 novel Mindswap a rambling and
disjointed disaster or a virtuosos postmodern pastiche? Or
perhaps a bit of both?
Roger Zelazny
Roger Zelazny found inexhaustible inspiration for science
fiction adventure stories in the oldest myths, legends and
religious belief systems.
17 Babel-17 (1966)
Samuel R. Delany
Rydra Wong, the protagonist of Samuel Delany's Babel-17
is a poet, skilled linguist and intergalactic literary celebrity
and, yes, a starship captain in her spare time.
3.
Yes, this was an unlikely revolution in the sci-fi field. But
nothing seemed capable of stopping the trend once it was
set in motion, and it clearly respected no geographical
borders. Even as the US emerged as the winner in the
space race, it faced increasingly intense competition in
the sci-fi racket. In the early sixties, Britain seemed on the
brink of eclipsing the US as the center of experimental
science fiction. In continental Europe, leading writers of
the new generation, such as Italo Calvino and Stanisaw
Lem, inserted science fiction concepts into ambitious
works of literary fiction.
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John Barth
Think of John Barth's oddball novel as a cross between
Tarzan of the Apes and the Holy Bible. It's almost as long
as the King James Version, and roughly follows the same plot.
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4.
25 Dangerous Visions (1967)
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Britain set off this revolution. Give credit to D.H. Lawrence. No,
not for his science fiction books (he didn't write any), but for
his estate's success in winning the 1960 court battle that
allowed London publisher Penguin Books to sell unexpurgated
copies of Lawrence's Lady Chatterley's Lover. In the aftermath
of this decision, British readers could enjoy previously banned
fiction, provided the publisher could demonstrate "literary
merit." The doors were now open, and in a surprising
development, the new permissive environment changed
the course of science fiction.
29 Nova (1968)
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Samuel R. Delany
Delany is up to his usual tricks. Sci-fi plot lines get turbocharged
with archetypes. Astronauts are fetishized beyond recognition.
They invariably ally announce they would rather be writers.
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Yet others were giving him a run for his money. Some of
Brian Aldiss's work comes across as derivativeyou can
almost chart the various books that influenced him as you
read each chapter. But at his best, his reckless audacity
jumps off the page. And his range during the 1960s may
be the widest of any sci-fi writer of that period. It
encompassed fabulistic future-tripping (Hot House),
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psychedelic armageddon (Barefoot in the Head), and even selfcanceling meta-narrative (Report on Probability A).
Michael Moorcock completes this triumvirate of British New
Wave stars. His influence as an editor surpasses his
achievements as a writeras reigning guru overseeing
the periodical New Worlds, he regularly delivered a
megadose of dicey sci-fi content for a reasonable two
shillings and six pence. Well, perhaps not so regularly;
some months the magazine never appeared on the newsstand. The internal chaos at New Worlds caused a few of
these interruptions, but censorship by retailers also played
a role. Yet if you did get your hands on a copy, you wouldn't
be bored. Moorcock's writings are too disorganized for my
taste, but his hubris was off the chart. On any list of
"science fiction books not to recommend to a Christian
reader," his Behold the Man gets top spot. And his Jerry
Cornelius stories make Nietzsche look like a lukewarm
nihilist by comparison. In an age in which success was
often measured by how many people you could piss off,
Moorcock met or exceeded his quota every month.
As the 1960s progressed, US writers began playing a larger
role in this sci-fi revolution. For many readers, Harlan
Ellison stands out as the most representative figure of
radicalized sci-fi, and like Moorcock he made his mark
both as writer and editor. Ellison's anthology Dangerous
Visions (1967) is a mixed bag, but despite its limitations it
may be the single best starting-point for readers who want
to comprehend the tectonic shift underway in 1960s genre
fiction. Yet I like Ellison even better as a memoirist and
fiction writerby any measure, he ranks among the leading
short story authors of his generation. But others were ready
to vie with him for preeminence in edgy American sci-fi.
Native New Yorker Norman Spinrad enjoyed the distinction
of getting copies of New Worlds pulled off the shelves at the
largest magazine retailers in Britain, when Moorcock serialzed
parts of Bug Jack Barron, and his works not only pushed
forward the New Wave agenda, but also anticipated elements
of the later cyberpunk movement. Thomas M. Disch also stands
out in any survey of US sci-fi experimenters, and not just for
his skill as a storytellerhis work as a historian and critic of
genre literature are required reading for those seeking an
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39 Ubik (1969)
Philip K. Dick
"Pop tasty Ubik into your toaster, made only from fresh fruit and
healthful all-vegetable shortening. Ubik makes breakfast a feast,
puts zing into your thing."
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5.
42 Emphyrio (1969)
Jack Vance
Jack Vance may have been too much of a perfectionist for genre
fiction, yet limited by the divided literary culture of his day that
scorned writers who set stories in outer space.
The best of this work has held up well over time. But much of
it, in retrospect, seems coldly calculated, or just too
experimental for its own good. Does anyone nowadays really
enjoy reading The Soft Machine or The Ticket That Exploded or
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48 Ringworld (1970)
Larry Niven
Imagine a very, very large hula hoop in the cosmos. Add floating
buildings, hostile sunflowers and various fascinating gadgets. Such
is Larry Niven's Ringworld.
49 Moderan (1971)
David R. Bunch
David R. Bunch, who passed away in 2000 at age 74, may be the
best kept secret in New Wave sci-fi. Sad to say, almost everything
he wrote is now out of print.
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romance novel?
6.
But the revolution in 1960s science fiction was more than just
the infusion of new subjects (religion, sex, etc.) to replace
the old ones (robots, space, etc.). Writers were also
experimenting with stream of consciousness techniques,
fragmented narrative structures, cut-and-paste methods
and other different ways of constructing sentences and
paragraphs.
Unless you have read deeply into 1960s and 1970s sci-fi,
you may not realize how much influence James Joyce
exerted on the field. But his impact can be seen in many of
the key works of the era. Philip Jos Farmer won a Hugo for
his 1967 novella "Riders of the Purple Wage," which reaches
its climax with a Joycean pun that even Joyce would have
found too extreme. In Barefoot in the Head (1969), Brian
Aldiss made the bold, albeit implausible, prediction that
futuristic people drugged out on a sufficient amount of
hallucinogenics would start talking in Joycean stream-ofconsciousness sentences. In Dhalgren (1975), Samuel R.
Delany even aimed at delivering a sci-fi Finnegans Wake
one that clocked in at almost 900 pages, longer than
anything Joyce himself had attempted. We also see streamof-consciousness in Thomas Disch's Camp Concentration,
Philip K. Dick's VALIS, Norman Spinrad's Bug Jack Barron,
and in crossover sci-fi works such as Gravity's Rainbow and
Ada.
55 Crash (1973)
J.G. Ballard
No author has ever lavished more sensually-charged adjectives on
the various parts that make up a typical car. Even better if they are
smashed to smithereens.
And why not? After all, if Joyce heralded the future of fiction,
To read more, click here
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7.
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59 Dhalgren (1975)
Samuel R. Delany
Delany's 800-page novel aimed to do for science fiction what
Joyce had done for literary fiction. A million copies were sold,
but how many actually were read to the end?
60 Norstrilia (1975)
Cordwainer Smith
Did author Cordwainer Smith really believe he was "Lord of a
planet in an interplanetary empire in a distant universe"? Was
Norstrilia a work of fiction, or just an extended hallucination?
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Joanna Russ
Joanna Russ's The Female Man, from 1975, stands out as a
defining work of feminist science fiction, and a milestone in
mixing polemic and genre literature.
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