Learning from Other Worlds

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2001-08-01
Publisher(s): Duke Univ Pr
List Price: $104.95

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Summary

Learning from Other Worldsprovides both a portrait of the development of science fiction criticism as an intellectual field and a definitive look at the state of science fiction studies today. Its title refers to the essence of "cognitive estrangement" in relation to science fiction and utopian fiction-the assertion that by imagining strange worlds we learn to see our own world in a new perspective. Acknowledging an indebtedness to the groundbreaking work of Darko Suvin and his belief that the double movement of estrangement and cognition reflects deep structures of human storytelling, the contributors assert that learning-from-otherness is as natural and inevitable a process as the instinct for imitation and representation that Aristotle described in hisPoetics. In exploring the relationship between imaginative invention and that of allegory or fable, the essays inLearning from Other Worldscomment on the fieldrs"s most abiding concerns and employ a variety of critical approaches-from intellectual history and genre studies to biographical criticism, feminist cultural studies, and political textual analysis. Among the topics discussed are the works of John Wyndham, Kim Stanley Robinson, Stanislau Lem, H.G. Wells, and Ursula Le Guin, as well as the mediars"s reactions to the 1997 cloning of Dolly the Sheep. Darko Suvinrs"s characteristically outspoken and penetrating afterword responds to the essays in the volume and offers intimations of a further stage in his long and distinguished career. This useful compendium and companion offers a coherent view of science fiction studies as it has evolved while paying tribute to the debt it owes Suvin, one of its first champions. As such, it will appeal to critics and students of science fiction, utopia, and fantasy writing. Contributors.Marc Angenot, Marleen S. Barr, Peter Fitting, Carl Freedman, Edward James, Fredric Jameson, David Ketterer, Gerard Klein, Tom Moylan, Rafail Nudelman, Darko Suvin

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements vi
Contributors vii
Introduction: Learning from Other Worlds 1(18)
Patrick Parrinder
Part I: Science Fiction and Utopia: Theory and Politics
Before the Novum: The Prehistory of Science Fiction Criticism
19(17)
Edward James
Revisiting Suvin's Poetics of Science Fiction
36(15)
Patrick Parrinder
`Look into the dark': On Dystopia and the Novum
51(21)
Tom Moylan
Science Fiction and Utopia: A Historico-Philosophical Overview
72(26)
Carl Freedman
Society After the Revolution: The Blueprints for the Forthcoming Socialist Society published by the Leaders of the Second International
98(21)
Marc Angenot
Part II: Science Fiction in its Social, Cultural and Philosophical Contexts
From the Images of Science to Science Fiction
119(8)
Gerard Klein
Estranged Invaders: The War of the Worlds
127(19)
Peter Fitting
`A part of the ... family [?]': John Wyndham's The Midwich Cuckoos as Estranged Autobiography
146(32)
David Ketterer
Labyrinth, Double and Mask in the Science Fiction of Stanislaw Lem
178(15)
Rafail Nudelman
`We're at the start of a new ball game and that's why we're all real nervous': Or, Cloning--Technological Cognition Reflects Estrangement from Women
193(15)
Marleen S. Barr
`If I find one good city I will spare the man': Realism and Utopia in Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars Trilogy
208(25)
Fredric Jameson
Afterword: With Sober, Estranged Eyes 233(39)
Darko Suvin
Darko Suvin: Checklist of Printed Items that Concern Science Fiction 272(19)
Bibliography 291(16)
Index 307

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