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Roots of Science Fiction – who was first?
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M13 Mary Shelleys Frankenstein the first
2.4. Roots of Science Fiction – who was first?
It turned out to be virtually impossible for scholars to determine the point in history when science fiction emerged, since there are numerous opposing views on what is accordingly regarded as science fiction (Bould x). As science fiction also occurs in new media, it is worth mentioning that the following brief history focuses almost exclusively on the science fiction as literature and is only partial, naming various trends and characteristic texts, but still hardly scrapes the surface of a dynamic, broad and continually developing genre. Long before the term science fiction was coined, there were texts that contained elements which are now closely associated with science fiction (Bould 1). Feige as well shares this opinion, as he regards Homer’s odyssey in the 8 th century B.C. as the basis for Jules Verne’s fantastic adventure novels. Those novels, he states, laid the foundations of today’s science fiction (Feige 13). Thus, Feige is of the opinion that many science-fictional ideas took shape among the ancient Greeks. The different forms of society and the fantastic journeys of Ulysses represent its roots (Feige 15). Initial science fiction, according to Feige (6-7), had a low entertainment value as it rather consisted of politically motivated papers and essays. The English humanist and philosophical writer Sir Thomas Morus wrote Utopia (1516) which is one of the first political novels. He does not only describe in his work the social evil of his times and criticize the government, but also depicts an alternative version. His island Utopia portrays an ideal world, so to say a political, economical and social substitute. This and later stories of fictitious and paradisiacal countries, i.e. utopias, belong to the political field of science fiction. Those authors generally consider themselves as curers of the world’s ills, not as writers (Feige 7). The scientific achievements could not have been possible without fantasy, but fantasy too enthusiastically made use of science. Decisive inventions appeared with the beginning of the industrialization in the 19 th century and thus had a great impact on science fiction. Authors abstract developments and visions; the result of which is a triple of mutual influence: 10 literature, technology and leisure (Feige 13-14). With the beginning of the industrialization in the 19 th century and the demystification of previously “alien” regions, readers of fantastic literature could also escape from the rationally not immediately explicable matter, at least while reading (Feige 7). As the founder of the modern era of science fiction, Feige considers Jules Verne whose inventiveness and fantasy served and still today serves as an example for numerous science fiction authors and stories. He supposedly was the first to focus on scientific and technological processes in literature (Feige 14-15). Kelleghan in contrast claims that science fiction has its roots in the nineteenth century and regards Mark Twain’s A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court (1889) as the first time-travel novel, heralding contemporary works of Well and Verne (xx). Furthermore, Feige states that the original technical fiction, i.e. science fiction which celebrates the unquestioning optimism of progress developed from the utopian fiction (Feige 7). However, Aldiss, British author of the multiple-award-winning Helliconia series (1982-1985), states that science fiction is just not as meant for scientists as ghost stories for ghosts. In most cases the scientific shell covers what is generally considered to be fantasy (Aldiss 1 cited in Feige 7). With the rapid progress and the development of new media and technologies, the interest in the future grew. The science fiction started looking ahead. Authors asked themselves how mankind would proceed. They frequently pointed to risks and dangers people would be confronted with in a present and future which is threatened to be entirely ruled by technology: the artificial human being as in Frankenstein and artificial intelligences put the fear of progress into the society. As a result of the political events in Europe in the middle of the 1920s the utopia turned into a dystopia. Violence, mind control, loneliness and standardization became essential topics – Huxley’s Brave New World and Orwell’s 1984 do not believe any longer in a positive future. They consider the restlessness of an intelligent readership which longed for a creative realization of their fears and not only for entertainment (Feige 8). Nonetheless, the most popular in gaining supporters is definitely Shelley’s novel Frankenstein as the pioneer of science fiction literature (Bould 2). Download 180.37 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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