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From Gerald R. Lucas

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  • {{Big|Resources for the study of sf: '''science''' and '''speculative fiction'''.}} ...equences of scientific, social, and technological innovations. [[w:Science fiction|Continue reading on Wikipedia »]]. {{More}}
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  • ...before my professional interest in literary studies, I was an avid science fiction reader. Even part of my dissertation addresses the genre. Here are some of 🌟 Check out my [[Science Fiction Study Guide]], new for Fall 2020.
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  • ...ne section of HUMN 4472 Studies in Culture will examine short-form science fiction in literature, television, and short film.|font=Alegreya Sans SC|size=24px} ...ies, but arguably no other genre has benefited from this form than science fiction. We will consider the benefits of terse, episodic statements and what they
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  • Some of these definitions of science fiction are useful; some less so. However, I think it’s smart to see as many idea ...for its imaginative speculations in physical science, space, time, social science, and philosophy.|author=Sam Moskowitz|source=''Explorers of the Infinite''
    11 KB (1,644 words) - 09:10, 19 August 2019
  • ...man spirit.<ref>Originally entitled “Carl Sagan’s Vision: Toward a Science Fiction Epic” and published on Nov 10, 1998 @ 17:01.</ref> ...of human knowledge in politics, philosophy, philology, art, theology, and science because of a greater and more equal dissemination of knowledge. No longer w
    18 KB (2,867 words) - 09:32, 30 May 2022
  • 9 KB (1,455 words) - 11:22, 17 September 2019
  • ...his form than science fiction. This course will examine short-form science fiction in stories, television, and films.}} ...{{font|text=Research|font=Alegreya Sans SC}}: “[[w:Science fiction|Science Fiction]]” (you can start on Wikipedia) and bring what you find out to class for
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  • 3 KB (516 words) - 10:37, 3 October 2019
  • ...would argue it still does. How do these texts broaden the scope of science fiction, or address its limitations? Hoe is the notion of the “alien” redefined ...help you become better editors. While you should have done so in [[Science Fiction, Fall 2019/Lesson 1|L1]], you must [https://dashboard.wikiedu.org/courses/M
    4 KB (568 words) - 08:48, 30 August 2019
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  • ...t want to work on as your semester project {{crossreference|(see [[Science Fiction, Fall 2019/R1 Wikipedia Contributions|R1]])}}. You needn’t decide right n
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  • Welcome to lesson two. This week, we begin our foray into short-form science fiction with two texts that play with time and perception: [[w:John Cheever|John Ch ...urnal#Student Journals|R2 tab]] above or off [[w:User talk:Grlucas#Science Fiction Student Journals, Fall 2019|my talk page]]. You task here is to comment on,
    7 KB (1,160 words) - 08:46, 30 August 2019
  • {{Huge|Introduction to Science Fiction and Wikipedia}}<br />{{small|August 14–August 23, 2019}} ...l posts;|Cite your first references;|Begin exploring and defining “science fiction.”}}
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Page text matches

  • {{Large|Welcome to HUMN 2151: Short-Form Science Fiction.}} ...ies, but arguably no other genre has benefited from this form than science fiction.}}
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  • __NOTOC__{{Huge|Perspectives on Genre Fiction}} ...ch may include speculative, horror, fantastic, romantic, crime, or science fiction. The course includes an online Critical Thinking and Oral Communication (CT
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  • {{Big|Resources for the study of sf: '''science''' and '''speculative fiction'''.}} ...equences of scientific, social, and technological innovations. [[w:Science fiction|Continue reading on Wikipedia »]]. {{More}}
    2 KB (289 words) - 09:49, 24 July 2020
  • #REDIRECT [[Science Fiction Study Guide]]
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  • {{Large|Welcome to HUMN 1011: Perspectives on Genre Fiction.}} ...urse is subtitled “Short-form Science Fiction,” as we will examine science fiction, our chosen ''genre'', in stories, television, and films. This will be a co
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  • ...s that have been covered in past courses include: digital culture, science fiction, and critical approaches to the humanities.}} | [[/Summer 2021/]] || 52687 || HUMN 2151.02 || Science Fiction || {{F-Online}} || {{CNone|-}}
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  • {{Large|Take Science Fiction This Fall}}
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  • {{Large|Take Perspectives on Science Fiction this Summer}}
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  • {{Large|Take Intro to Science Fiction this Fall}}
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  • {{Large|Take Survey of Science Fiction this Fall!}}
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  • Take HUMN 2151, Intro to Science Fiction, this fall!
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  • Take HUMN 4472, Science Fiction, this fall!
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  • {{Large|August 19 – September 1: What Is Science Fiction?}}<br /> {{Big|First off: let’s try to define our term: science fiction—it may not be what you think.}}
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  • ...[https://amzn.to/3asNxi4 Sisters of the Revolution: A Feminist Speculative Fiction Anthology]'' a collection of short stories edited by [[w:Ann VanderMeer|Ann ...ion, and early trials—mostly in proving herself in a male-dominated field. Science has become the new language of myth in the latter half of the twentieth cen
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  • To my friend and fellow Mailer and science fiction enthusiast: Andrew Gordon. Thanks for the good times; the kindness; the dis
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  • __NOTOC__{{jt|title=Science Fiction Introduction Outline}} ...irst=Ursula |chapter=Introduction |date=1993 |title=Norton Book of Science Fiction |editor1-last=Le Guin |editor1-first=Ursula K. |editor2-last=Atteberry |edi
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  • ...before my professional interest in literary studies, I was an avid science fiction reader. Even part of my dissertation addresses the genre. Here are some of 🌟 Check out my [[Science Fiction Study Guide]], new for Fall 2020.
    3 KB (476 words) - 11:20, 31 March 2022
  • ...thing similar about science: it is the current pinnacle of human progress. Science has helped to cast off the ignorance of our species’ youth and shown us a Perhaps science fiction does this best of all.
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  • ...2016|(Post)Modernism and Utopia]]; Voices and Visions: A Survey of Science Fiction; Interdisciplinary Humanities (Online) ...0, 2012|iTunes U]]; Modernism; Utopia and Apocalypse; Metaphysical Science Fiction
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  • ...ear. It appeared to be a supernatural thriller, but it turned into science fiction. I ended up liking it, and ''Perfume'' has a similar feel. Both are well-ac ...k'', it seems to have a supernatural quality that later turns into science fiction — I’m glad, because supernatural stuff does not do it for me at all. I
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  • ...dventure, first and foremost, so I should know something factual about the science, no? ...ail about the science. Science fiction, probably more than any other genre fiction other than fantasy, has its own set of givens. Things like warp speed, spac
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  • ...m another dimension. ''[[w:Diaspora (novel)|Diaspora]]'' is strong science fiction: engaging, smart, challenging—pushing the boundaries of perception and po [[Category:Science Fiction]]
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  • ...ne section of HUMN 4472 Studies in Culture will examine short-form science fiction in literature, television, and short film.|font=Alegreya Sans SC|size=24px} ...ies, but arguably no other genre has benefited from this form than science fiction. We will consider the benefits of terse, episodic statements and what they
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  • [[Category:Science Fiction]]
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  • Still I should read a novel. Maybe some good science fiction?
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  • ...ear-future predictions are not. But author Robert J. Sawyer says, ‘Science fiction has never been about the future, …}} ...m/technology/is-science-fiction-finished/article1140621/ |title=Is science fiction finished? |last=Caldwell |first=Rebecca |date={{date|2004-09-08|MDY}} |webs
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  • ...would argue it still does. How do these texts broaden the scope of science fiction, or address its limitations? Hoe is the notion of the “alien” redefined ...help you become better editors. While you should have done so in [[Science Fiction, Fall 2019/Lesson 1|L1]], you must [https://dashboard.wikiedu.org/courses/M
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  • ...)ation, Trauma, and Blasphemy in Science Fiction'''. (I know that “science fiction” should be nuanced.) [[Category:Science Fiction]]
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  • Some of these definitions of science fiction are useful; some less so. However, I think it’s smart to see as many idea ...for its imaginative speculations in physical science, space, time, social science, and philosophy.|author=Sam Moskowitz|source=''Explorers of the Infinite''
    11 KB (1,644 words) - 09:10, 19 August 2019
  • {{Jt|title=Summer of Women in Science Fiction}} ...y) theme), I decided officially to make this my summer of women in science fiction. My summer reading began with [[w:Jeff VanderMeer|Jeff VanderMeer]]’s ''[
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  • ...g Sterling’s preface to Gibson’s ''Burning Chrome'', the notion of science fiction as a genre struck me as having a mobile positioning and a passionate detach ...body in our products (like from ''Crash'') — to the X-Files effect and the science-fictionalization of culture, and the dead media that allows us to go into p
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  • ...it doesn’t even feel like science fiction, but maybe a dialog on political science or sociology. Yet, you know it’s important and weighty because the men in
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  • ...—called for a radical departure from the stagnant state of popular science fiction. Their newsletter called ''Cheap Truth'' assumed a punk-like, reactionary v The world of cyberpunk is the one that science made: clean, precise and pulpy, squishy. Technology has replaced nature, an
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  • ...slipstream, and the like. Part of its more inclusive purview, speculative fiction also breaks with the traditional concerns of a white, male-dominated reader ...l elements of the fantastic voyage into a concentration on the products of science and technology, like Mary Shelley’s ''Frankenstein'' (1818) and several o
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  • ...yday.'''<ref>The original introduction to Big Jelly, a website for science fiction, futurism, and technoculture. I had the great idea to do a group blog with ...ublishes articles, essays, notes, and reviews about technoculture, science fiction, and futurism. Have an idea? Want to contribute? Submit to our group or sen
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  • {{Large|Science Fiction: Epic Continuity}} Olaf Stapledon, at the end of his science fiction epic ''Last and First Men'', states that
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  • ...manities}}. His interests include [[Writing on Science Fiction|speculative fiction]], [[Writing on New Media|digital media]], [[Writing on Education|elearning
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  • {{Huge|Introduction to Science Fiction and Wikipedia}}<br />{{small|August 14–August 23, 2019}} ...l posts;|Cite your first references;|Begin exploring and defining “science fiction.”}}
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  • I might put it down for a while and read some science fiction to go along with my Netflix binges this past week. I’ve watched a few sf
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  • ...made, even though a part of reality is destroyed. Deckard’s bounty hunter fiction (his job) collides with his growing empathy toward Rachael Rosen (physical ...ecial,” or die. With life departing the world, empathy becomes the favored fiction of the day: empathy defines the human.
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  • The exhibit dealt with science fiction, and it was very cool; I spent at least three hours there. I purchased the
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  • ...on’t think I’ve ever had a very good experience with my Short-Form Science Fiction class. I would have ''loved'' a similar class in college. The attrition rat
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  • ...''Star Trek: Discovery'', and {{HSL}} likes to watch it and other science fiction with me. He likes Isaac on ''The Orville'', and I’m thinking of showing h
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  • {{dc|T}}{{Big|his weekend’s reading was a selection of classic science fiction texts, and the first in the convergence section of my current course. They ...n decoding religious belief. Rather than being the enemy of religion, here science provides the mechanism for making religious belief real: the computer joins
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  • ...udy of the epic in the classroom. How can modern manifestations of science fiction illuminate the classical epic? What aspects of the genre have changed, or a ...rd to a more intimate knowledge of Vico in his autobiography and his ''New Science''.
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  • * 23: [[October 23, 1995|Science Fiction: Epic Continuity]]
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  • .../title/tt0118884/ Contact]]'', a film I’ve discussed in [[Toward a Science Fiction Epic|relation to the epic before]]. I then asked the students to write thei ...r reason as a scientist. Since she had no proof of her journey — something science relies upon — Kitz suggests that she imagined the whole thing. Her re
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  • ...tiple reading lists, like one for literary fiction and another for science fiction. It could use the keywords, like “deep time” or “cosmic horror.” A
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  • Welcome to lesson two. This week, we begin our foray into short-form science fiction with two texts that play with time and perception: [[w:John Cheever|John Ch ...urnal#Student Journals|R2 tab]] above or off [[w:User talk:Grlucas#Science Fiction Student Journals, Fall 2019|my talk page]]. You task here is to comment on,
    7 KB (1,160 words) - 08:46, 30 August 2019
  • ...rrowed from Placebo) and is up to just over 6000 words. It’s a {{c|Science Fiction|sf}} story, the first I’ve ever written. I’ve always read science fiction, more for ideas than for literary style. I’m not saying that sf is devoid
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  • After lunch I met Veronica Hollinger, an editor for ''Science Fiction Studies'', Joe Haldeman, and Stephan R. Donaldson. The latter I heard read,
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  • ...k |chapter=Science Fiction and a World in Crisis |date=1974 |title=Science Fiction, Today and Tomorrow |url= |location=New York |publisher=Harper and Row |pag ...|title=Star Maker: Olaf Stapledon’s Divine Tragedy |url= |journal=Science Fiction Studies |volume=8 |issue=3 |page=269 |ref=harv }}</ref> Plugging oneself in
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  • | L2 || 2–3 || August 19 – September 1 || [[/2|What is Science Fiction?]] || 60 || {{tick}}
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  • ...the pictures. This is a rock-solid, harder-than-diamonds, [[w:Hard science fiction|''hard'' sf]]. My Kindle’s dictionary just shrugs when I try to look anyt
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  • ...seems always to be a central concern of his work: the limits of reason and science. Like his story “[[April 22, 1997|Reason]],” “Nightfall” shows how Science, itself, disrupts. “Nightfall” illustrates the contention between science and religion, or fact and belief. The scientists attempt to explain what wi
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  • ...was teaching my [[Short-Form Science Fiction, Fall 2019|short-form science fiction course]]? [[Category:Science Fiction]]
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  • ...can Dream. I think the premise is what makes this fantasy, but the science-fiction elements soon take center-stage as the our history begins to diverge with t
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  • ...great ''[[w:Twilight Zone|Twilight Zone]]'' episode. It’s really a science-fiction, horror story that has a simple mystery and a nice payoff at the end that c
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  • ...N 1011.01 || [[Short-Form Science Fiction, Fall 2019|Perspectives on Genre Fiction]] || MW 9:30-10:45 || CoAS-122 | 86228 || HUMN 4472.01 || [[Science Fiction, Fall 2019|Studies in Culture]] || {{F-Online}} || {{CNone|-}}
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  • ...|first=Donna |date=1990 |orig-year=1985 |chapter=A Manifesto for Cyborgs: Science, Technology, and Socialist Feminism in the 1980s |chapter-url=https://archi [[Category:Science Fiction]]
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  • ...on writing. I have to agree. Therefore, my resolution is not to write more fiction (though I certainly will if I get the opportunity), but to get at least one
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  • ...see our mutual friend Tom. It’s cool because we can geek out about science fiction and Mailer.
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  • ...then. What else was a nerdy little kid to do but to read expansive science fiction and fantasy cycles? ...r center a demigod. I’ve discussed [[Toward a Science Fiction Epic|science fiction’s relationship to the epic]] before, so I don’t have to rehash the part
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  • ...ourselves in relation to the universe. Call the first relationship that of science and the latter that of philosophy. I understand that this distinction is wr ...ould be called a novel of golden age sf, where an almost romantic faith in science can solve the problems of the world and help humanity though their most dif
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  • ...his form than science fiction. This course will examine short-form science fiction in stories, television, and films.}} ...{{font|text=Research|font=Alegreya Sans SC}}: “[[w:Science fiction|Science Fiction]]” (you can start on Wikipedia) and bring what you find out to class for
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  • ...of Twentieth-Century Fiction |volume=Volume II: Twentieth-century American Fiction |chapter-url=https://grlucas.net/grl/Speculative_Fiction |url=https://www.g ...ald R. |title=‘It Might Not Be Unpleasant to Live’: The Transitional Short Fiction of Norman Mailer |url= |journal=The Mailer Review |volume=15 |issue= |date=
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  • ...but overall I guess I just wasn’t sure what I was reading. Was it science fiction? A political polemic? A metaphysical treatise? A bunch of related short sto [[Category:Science Fiction]]
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  • [[Category:Science Fiction]]
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  • ...lds both wonders and terrors that almost approaches ''Dune''-level science fiction. Like ''Dune'', I think part of what’s compelling about Reynolds’ world
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  • ...ns of my branching interest in technoculture. Most of it is on speculative fiction: Ballard, Dick, Cronenberg, Baudrillard, Haraway, cyborgs, The X-Files, and ...pecially the latter. There’s something akin to my fascination with science fiction, I think. I do even include some futurism in the New Media course.
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  • ...Soon came a stronger government, military, industry, and corporations—with Science leading the way—that vied for a slice of the USA. They provided security ...this seems to be the drive of Western civilization since its founding. Add science into the mix, and ''man’s'' ultimate achievement is also his ultimate thr
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  • ...which he served as president his senior year, and read fantasy and science fiction from an early age. While he did not excel as an academic, his interests in ...as got his first hint of literary studies in higher ed with a contemporary fiction course with Dr. Carole Cole. After trying a major in music, then a short-li
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  • File:Lucaspix03.jpeg|Science fiction author Jack McDevitt
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  • ...man spirit.<ref>Originally entitled “Carl Sagan’s Vision: Toward a Science Fiction Epic” and published on Nov 10, 1998 @ 17:01.</ref> ...of human knowledge in politics, philosophy, philology, art, theology, and science because of a greater and more equal dissemination of knowledge. No longer w
    18 KB (2,867 words) - 09:32, 30 May 2022
  • ...bably reminded me of a spaceship that I imagined out of one of the science fiction books I was reading at the time. To my young mind, that was a good enough r
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  • ...The need for '''digital natives''' who are fluent in discerning fact from fiction, truth from spin, scientific consensus from ideology has never been more ne ...1101, ENGL 1102, a sophomore literature survey, and a history or political science class. Subject matter would obviously be emphasized, but the research and w
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  • * “Mailer’s Transitional Short Fiction.” The Norman Mailer Society Conference, Long Branch, NJ, Jun 2022. * “[[October 23, 2018|Norman Mailer’s Short Fiction]].” The Norman Mailer Society Conference, Macon, GA, Oct 2018.
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  • ...ale was also one of the best. At first, I thought it was going all science-fiction on me, and I wasn’t sure about that direction. Also, I could see where it
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  • Read more science fiction on [https://www.kurzweilai.net/ his site].
    4 KB (661 words) - 08:15, 6 March 2020
  • ...is in {{c|Literary|literary studies}}, and I also write about {{c|Science Fiction|sf}}, {{c|New Media|new media}} (and {{c|Technoculture|technoculture}}), {{
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  • ...to]] is still seminal (excuse the word) to the study of new media. Science fiction is becoming the new reality. The dialectic of last century is tired. We nee ...ll this do to our humanistic endeavors of morality and ethics? Philosophy? Science? Religion? Art? Even these could be lost, as many other critics predict. Wh
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  • ...n” in my [[ENGL 1102]] class. It strikes me this time through as a science-fiction allegory where some humans have evolved and perhaps mutated into superior b
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  • ...ise you, but I often get asked “what’s your favorite novel?”—“what science fiction book should I read next?”—“what books did you use to teach such-and-s
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  • ...objects seem to be guided by a mathematically predictable physics, the new science did not explain the origin of these systems. The church could survive a cha ...m J. |date=2009 |chapter=Eutopia |title=The Routledge Companion to Science Fiction |editor1-last=Bould |editor1-first=Mark |editor2-last=Butler |editor2-first
    19 KB (2,975 words) - 08:53, 12 March 2022
  • ...sing. Seriously, why in the world would they produce a high-budget science fiction television series based on a video game when they could, for example, devel
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  • ...rspace|cyberspace]].” The idea of plugging in to the machine was a science fiction trope popularized by the [[w:Cyberpunk|cyberpunks]], and it drove our first
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  • ...troubled skyways<ref>Interesting image, giving the song a bit of a science fiction-feel. What are these skyways and why are they troubled? In any case, it see
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  • ...s ''Teaching with Your Mouth Shut'' and Bruce Sterling’s (yes, the science fiction writer) ''Tomorrow Now'', and all left the impression that I should be rem
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  • * Panel Chair, “From Vampires to Video Games: Cultural Anxiety and Science Fiction,” PCA/ACA, Atlanta, GA, Apr 2006 * Event Coordinator, Georgia Science Olympiad, 2005-2013
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  • ...t want to work on as your semester project {{crossreference|(see [[Science Fiction, Fall 2019/R1 Wikipedia Contributions|R1]])}}. You needn’t decide right n
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  • ...Solaristics is the space era’s equivalent of religion: faith disguised as science. . . . Solaristics is a revival of long-vanished myths, the expression o ...film adaptations of his novel, but their visions reflect revised views of science and technology’s influence on humanity.
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  • ...consciousness will be able to inhabit any body that we want it to. Science fiction? Perhaps, but that does not mean we can dismiss it as nonsense. Kurzweil is
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  • ...ything this summer, since summer is when I get caught up with some science fiction. Since I’m reading novels for work, I’ve been reading short stories for
    6 KB (950 words) - 11:36, 16 July 2022
  • ...corching summer day than Alfred Bester’s “Fondly Fahrenheit.” This science fiction narrative uses the heat almost as if it’s a character with its own voliti
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  • ...l=https://www.depauw.edu/sfs/backissues/66/bredehoft.html |journal=Science Fiction Studies |volume=22 |issue= |date=July 1995 |page=252 |access-date=2019-12-3 ...of “Gernsback” might be explained away by semiotic ghosts, but, in a truly science-fictional theory, they might represent breeches by quantum realities that c
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  • [[Category:Science Fiction]]
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  • ...urreal and phantasmagoric. Both, however, use the accouterments of science fiction to comment on sf narratives and to illustrate the dangers of wandering unwa ...ntact with the ''other''. “Impossible Dreams” wears the clothes of science fiction, but ultimately it’s a postmodern love story that unites two unlikely peo
    22 KB (3,628 words) - 10:17, 28 May 2022
  • ...er. I liked to watch television, listen to music, read fantasy and science fiction novels. I would much prefer staying awake all night to finish the latest [[
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  • [[Category:Science Fiction]]
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  • ...lisher= |access-date=2019-01-02 |quote=}}</ref>? Instead of one on science fiction, how about one on cyberpunk cinema by the decade? Instead of a car blog, ho
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  • ...s of academic studies about the enigmatic Solaris. Solaristics encompasses science, physics, philosophy, religion — any human intellectual attempt to fi ...universe in our own image. Lem seems to suggest that even our attempts at science, philosophy, and religion are ultimately to glorify our own presence in the
    13 KB (2,251 words) - 15:50, 26 May 2023
  • ...in the eighties. And really, I read all of them. My transition to science fiction was probably through Herbert’s ''Dune'' series, and after devouring that, ...e first two seasons of HBO’s excellent adaptation—it’s just, well, science fiction is my thing now. Besides, I just didn’t have time to read a ''who-knows-h
    16 KB (2,885 words) - 17:07, 9 October 2023
  • ...yellowing and becoming brittle. Most of these were collections of science fiction that I liked to keep on-hand. I never knew when I might teach a sf course.
    8 KB (1,534 words) - 14:47, 30 May 2022
  • ...onal British life in a sort of brave new world. It’s almost like a science-fiction allegory for slavery in the contemporary world. It considers the mechanisms
    9 KB (1,595 words) - 18:21, 7 July 2022
  • {{dc|T}}{{start|his collection of essays, articles, videos, and fiction}} explore the many facets of “[[New Media|new media]].” Use these sugge == Fiction ==
    44 KB (5,936 words) - 11:37, 4 October 2020
  • ...s |first=N. Katherine |title=The Borders of Madness |url= |journal=Science Fiction Studies |volume=18 |issue=3 |date={{date|1991}} |pages=321–323 |access-da ...s, through myth. Life is in the plot, not in the actuality. The reality of fiction offers life, not the distracting actuality of the abyss: “To plot, to tak
    14 KB (2,325 words) - 11:04, 30 May 2022
  • ...he necessity of participation in our community. By reading fiction and non-fiction, can we discuss the complexities of life and develop a critical and creativ ...ut….]”|“[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6xKDKq_PPbk The Evangelical War on Science]”|“[http://www.flickr.com/photos/stuckincustoms/430312027/ Fortress Cat
    17 KB (2,687 words) - 08:48, 19 October 2021
  • ...ce ({{harvnb|Nersessian|2021|p=46}}). There is an ambiguity here between a science of potential violence and one that is playfully idyllic. }} ...ts addresses the urn of his imagination admitting that what came before as fiction. Indeed, his descriptions have been so convincing, he is like the wizard be
    12 KB (1,986 words) - 16:56, 28 May 2022
  • While science and common sense can see that all humans do not share similar looks or body [[Category:Science Fiction]]
    20 KB (3,241 words) - 10:01, 28 May 2022