PatrickParrinde 2000 RevisitingSuvinsPoeti LearningFromOtherWorl
PatrickParrinde 2000 RevisitingSuvinsPoeti LearningFromOtherWorl
PatrickParrinde 2000 RevisitingSuvinsPoeti LearningFromOtherWorl
of Science Fiction
PATRICK PARRINDER
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research, and it has been very widely adopted. But is the model actually
coherent? Should a poetics of science fiction still be seen as a desirable and
necessary construction? And what sorts of blindness accompany its
insights? Suvin himself seems to have been disturbed by these questions.
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Revisiting Suvin’s Poetics of Science Fiction 37
In a number of essays since 1972 he has revisited his poetics of SF, and it is
a moot point whether this process of theoretical revision has shored up or
tacitly undermined the foundations that he originally laid down.3
To begin with estrangement, cognition and the novum: just as the poetics
of SF may in part be seen as a way of asserting the genre’s literary
respectability—a way, that is, of presenting it as a suitable object for criti-
cism and theory—the three terms defining its ‘necessary and sufficient
conditions’ partake of a translation process, mediating between the exist-
ing body of ideas familiar to SF writers and readers, and the philosophical
terminology of modern genre studies. Thus, estrangement, in the formal
sense of an ‘imaginative framework alternative to the author’s empirical
environment’, alludes to existing ideas about speculative fiction, fantasy
and scientific romance; but the term itself derives from the Russian for-
malists’ concept of ostranenie and Brecht’s Verfremdung.4 The interaction of
estrangement and cognition suggests the Gernsbackian idea of fiction with
a scientific explanation (scientifiction, science fiction), but Suvin opts for
the term ‘cognition’ because of its wider reference, roughly equivalent to
German Wissenschaft, French science and Russian nauka.5 Finally, the novum
is what H. G. Wells in a much-cited essay called the ‘fantastic element’ or
‘the strange property or the strange world’.6 Suvin’s use of the Latin term,
however, both invokes and reinterprets the utopian theorizing of the Marx-
ist philosopher Ernst Bloch.7 For anglophone readers these three faintly
exotic terms could be said to offer a microcosm of the process of ‘cognitive
estrangement’ that they exist to define.
In terms of systematic poetics, the co-presence of estrangement and cog-
nition represents one of four possible positions on a simple binary diagram
set out in Suvin’s 1973 essay ‘SF and the Genological Jungle’.8 Science fic-
tion belongs with myth, fantasy, fairy tale and pastoral in its possession of
an estranged formal framework that sets it apart from ‘naturalistic or
empiricist’ literary genres; but it differs from myth, fantasy and fairy tale in
its cognitive approach and function.9 The category of estrangement here is
supposedly uncontroversial, a matter of ‘formal frameworks’ merely;
though we shall need to remember that the Russian formalists showed that
the writing of a realistic novelist such as Tolstoy was full of estrangement
effects. For the time being, however, we shall focus on the category of cog-
nition, which is clearly highly controversial. Cognition, however defined,
will be found hard to separate from instruction which is one of the tradi-
tional goals of all worthwhile art; yet Suvin’s theory has the effect of con-
signing whole genres (not only myth, fantasy and fairy tale but what he
calls the ‘sub-literature of “realism” ’)10 to the non-cognitive position in his
genological system. A huge portion of the total literary output is, so to
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38 PATRICK PARRINDER
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Revisiting Suvin’s Poetics of Science Fiction 39
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40 PATRICK PARRINDER
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Revisiting Suvin’s Poetics of Science Fiction 41
I have mentioned above that in ‘SF and the Genological Jungle’ (1973)
Suvin describes myth, fantasy and fairy tale as ‘metaphysical’ genres. His
implied distinction between the metaphysical and the cognitive may be bet-
ter understood as a secondary distinction within cognition, between (let us
say) the metaphysical and the rational, or between the metaphysical and
the empirically verifiable or falsifiable. Suvin in his later work explicitly
endorses the idea of non-rational cognition.19 But cognition in science fic-
tion is not, or not primarily, of this kind, since (as he writes in ‘SF and the
Genological Jungle’) SF ‘shares with naturalistic literature, naturalistic sci-
ence, and naturalistic or materialist philosophy a common sophisticated,
dialectical, and cognitive epistemé’ (20). The question of how far Suvin’s
theory is axiomatically dependent upon a philosophy of scientific material-
ism, which is revised or abandoned in his later writings, arises in relation
to his essay on ‘SF and the Novum’ which rounds off the ‘Poetics’ section
in Metamorphoses of Science Fiction (1979).
The novum is the crucial element generating the estranged formal frame-
work or world of the SF text:
Now, no doubt, each and every poetic metaphor is a novum, while mod-
ern prose fiction has made new insights into man its rallying cry. How-
ever, though valid SF has deep affinities with poetry and innovative
realistic fiction, its novelty is ‘totalizing’ in the sense that it entails a
change of the whole universe of the tale, or at least of crucially important
aspects thereof (and that it is therefore a means by which the whole tale
can be analytically grasped). (64)
I will examine the proposed resemblance between science fiction and poetic
metaphor later in this chapter. At present we should note that the novum in
SF as opposed to fantasy is specifically ‘postulated on and validated by the
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42 PATRICK PARRINDER
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Revisiting Suvin’s Poetics of Science Fiction 43
Some relevant examples will show what is being included in, and
excluded from, science fiction at this point. (Admittedly, Suvin himself
observes that ‘One of the troubles with distinctions in genre theory is . . .
that literary history is full of “limit-cases” ’ (69). Wells’s The Time Machine,
which is cited in ‘SF and the Novum’ as one of a group of works which are
‘primarily fairly clear analogies to processes incubating in their author’s
epoch’ (78), is a non-controversial example of an SF text involving a novum.
(But if the future degeneration of the human species in Wells’s text is both
a novum and a reflexive analogy—that is, the Eloi and Morlocks confound
Victorian expectations of progress—it is surely not the only novum in the
story. Perhaps an extended SF narrative needs two or three novums?) The
cognitive logic involved and the analogies to processes incubating in the
author’s epoch are spelt out in the text and have withstood more than a
century of critical scrutiny, although—like all of Wells’s science-fictional
novums—they are open to various potential logical and scientific objections.
Most readers would unhesitatingly confirm that the Time Traveller’s dis-
coveries among the Eloi and Morlocks meet Suvin’s criterion of a suffi-
ciently autonomous narrative reality.
I will now consider a short story by Borges, ‘Funes, the Memorious’,
which Suvin would presumably classify as a metaphysical fantasy. Funes, a
countryman from the Argentine cattle town of Fray Bentos, receives his
extraordinary gift of memory after being crippled in a horseriding acident.
He is capable of recognizing and distinctly comprehending every object in
the material universe, but this does not, so the narrator insists, make him
capable of thought. ‘To think is to forget a difference, to generalise, to
abstract’;20 all that Funes can acknowledge and give a name to are discrete,
individual entities. The story’s cognitive logic is apparently a little muddled,
since the narrator asserts that Funes has learned English, French, Por-
tuguese and Latin without effort: we are not told how someone incapable
of any kind of abstraction and generalization can be said to have learned a
language. Since Funes has difficulty with a generic noun such as dog, how
can he distinguish between the English and the French languages? If,
within the narrative world of Borges’s parable, such questions can be dis-
missed as irrelevant nitpicking, that seems to make Suvin’s general point:
‘Funes, the Memorious’ is an allegory about cognition which does not try
very hard for cognitive consistency. On the other hand, both Borges’s story
and (as was suggested above) The Time Machine involve differing amounts
of logical sleight-of-hand. We should perhaps see Funes’s remarkable mem-
ory not as a failed (Wellsian) novum but as a quasi-novum or pseudo-novum;
the term pseudo-novum is suggested on the analogy of a pseudo-concept, a
‘notion treated as a concept though it cannot be properly conceptualised or
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44 PATRICK PARRINDER
grasped by the mind’ (OED), though Suvin in ‘SF and the Novum’ uses
‘pseudo-novum’ to mean, simply, a fake novum (81). The ‘novum’ in Borges’
story is not simply bogus, since the fact that Funes’s memory cannot be
properly conceptualized by the reader has in itself an instructive or cogni-
tive value. In other words, a story with a quasi-or pseudo-novum can serve
a cognitive function. If this turns out to be one of Suvin’s anomalies or
limit-cases, we may wonder whether the theory of cognitive estrangement
is not rather too generously productive of limit-cases. Is a parody of a sci-
ence-fiction story a science-fiction story? The question is pertinent since, as
Suvin himself has shown, much of the genre’s historical origins lie in par-
ody and forms of ‘Aesopian language’. Parody and satire thrive on analogy,
and Suvin regards SF, too, as an inherently analogical mode.
When he argues that ‘It is intrinsically or by definition impossible for SF
to acknowledge any metaphysical agency’, Suvin implies that the purpose
of SF is one of truth-telling. SF cannot acknowledge metaphysical agencies
because within the terms of the scientific epistemé such agencies are consid-
ered to be empirically false. Historically, the truth-telling modes of modern
SF emerged when writers of the positivist age decided to forgo satirical
fantasy in favour of technological extrapolation and prophetic anticipation.
Poe’s ‘Eureka’ and ‘Hans Pfaall’ and the Erewhon of Samuel Butler gave
place to the ‘futuristic present’ of Jules Verne and the futurological
warnings of Wells. Suvin sometimes plays down the satirical elements in
the works he discusses—in ‘SF and the Novum’ he dismisses Brave New
World and Nineteen Eighty-four, for example, as (untruthful) examples of
‘fashionable static dystopia’ without alluding to their status as avowed
satires (83) —but he also rigorously rejects any attempt to limit science fic-
tion to the functions of prophecy or extrapolation:
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Revisiting Suvin’s Poetics of Science Fiction 45
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46 PATRICK PARRINDER
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Revisiting Suvin’s Poetics of Science Fiction 47
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48 PATRICK PARRINDER
tory of literary theory since the Russian formalists suggests that theoretical
illusions are more or less inescapable; what is important is not so much to
avoid them as to prevent them from taking root and persisting, weed-like,
long after they have ceased to challenge the automatism of perception.
Suvin’s candour, and the restless progression of his thought, represents the
best kind of defence against illusions of this sort, but his search for a poet-
ics of science fiction has always and deliberately been conducted against
the grain of SF as a mode of popular entertainment. Does this make the
poetics of SF as he envisaged it something of a mirage? In Reading by
Starlight (1995) Damien Broderick describes Suvin as ‘In very large degree,
. . . the implicit Newton or Lévi-Strauss of contemporary science fiction
scholarship’, and adds that: ‘Having articulated the terms within which
learned argument has tended to be elaborated, Suvin’s contribution has
been absorbed so generally that it can seem transparently given—often a
sign that a framework is due for drastic deconstruction, if not overthrow’.25
Broderick’s principal objection to Suvin’s framework, it would seem, is that
SF is not, properly considered, a genre but a mode.26 The generic model is
too limited. Others, going beyond the more or less exclusively literary
domain that Broderick no less than Suvin endorses, have argued that SF is
not a mode but a ‘field’.
Each of these constructions and categorizations of science fiction is open
to question. A ‘field’ may be a recognizable sociological or historical entity
but it is too broad and vague to have much relevance for the theoretically
minded. A ‘mode’ in its literary sense hovers uncertainly between pedantic
archaism (in terms of which the ‘science-fictional’ would have to be distin-
guished from the comical, tragical, satirical, pastoral and so on) and inde-
finable looseness. A ‘genre’, being the tightest of the three terms—and thus
the only one that can be experienced by writers and critics as challenging
and prescriptive—throws up too many hybrids and limit-cases. Modes
have the advantage of cutting transversely across generic boundaries.
Suvin originally offered his theory as a ‘heuristic model’ for criticism and
research, an emphasis underlined by the title of one of his most recent
essays, ‘Novum Is as Novum Does’.27 Despite his (and others’) second
thoughts, his poetics remains the most rigorous and illuminating attempt
to understand science fiction as possessing a core of generic identity—a
condition not easily separable, I suggest, from its possession of a core iden-
tity of any sort. From Suvin’s perspective SF offers itself for inspection as a
form of cultural intervention definable in terms of its cognitive values and
estrangement values—in other words, as something more than a shop
window full of fictional commodities concerned with ‘science’, ‘wonder’
and ‘space’. To ‘fix’ SF as cultural intervention, Suvin has had to emphasize
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Revisiting Suvin’s Poetics of Science Fiction 49
the extent and nature of its control over the fantastic. Those who maintain
that literary fantasy is in fact uncontrollable will have to contend with H.
G. Wells’s principle (which Suvin must certainly endorse) that ‘Nothing
remains interesting where anything may happen’.28
Notes
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50 PATRICK PARRINDER
of the ‘analogic model’, he says that ‘as in all distinctions of this essay, one should
think of a continuum at whose extremes there is pure extrapolation and analogy,
and of two fields grouped around the poles and shading into each other on a wide
front in the middle’. The latter passage with its qualifying reference to ‘all distinc-
tions of this essay’ has been cut from the version of the argument that appears in
Metamorphoses of Science Fiction, although later in the book he describes extrapolation
as a ‘limit-case’ of analogy. (This is characteristic of the textual complexities of
Suvin’s writings.) Suvin, ‘On the Poetics of the Science Fiction Genre’, pp. 58, 68;
Metamorphoses of Science Fiction, pp. 29, 76.
19 D. Suvin, ‘On Cognitive Emotions and Topological Imagination’.
20 J. L. Borges, ‘Funes, the Memorious’, p. 104.
21 Suvin, Positions and Presuppositions in Science Fiction, p. 194.
22 Suvin, ‘On Cognitive Emotions and Topological Imagination’, p. 191; cf. Posi-
tions and Presuppositions in Science Fiction, p. 189.
23 This ‘age-old quarrel’ is mentioned by Plato in Book X of The Republic.
24 Clute and Nicholls, The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, pp. vii–viii.
25 D. Broderick, Reading by Starlight, p. 32.
26 Broderick is more interested in considering SF as constituted by a particular
set of rhetorical strategies than by a generic framework, but (as his conclusions tend
to confirm) this is largely a difference of emphasis. Coherent rhetorical strategies
presuppose a generic framework; the choice of generic framework limits the rhetor-
ical strategies available. Most of the items in Broderick’s summary of SF’s rhetori-
cal components can easily be related to ‘cognitive estrangement’. See Broderick,
Reading by Starlight, pp. 156–57.
27 D. Suvin, ‘Novum Is as Novum Does’.
28 Wells, ‘Preface to The Scientific Romances’, p. 241.
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