4:00p-5:15p TR (70) 3 cr
This course is designed to provide a historical introduction to print
science fiction as a genre, with a strong but not exclusive emphasis
on the development of the genre in the U.S. during the 20th century.
We will begin with the "pulp" adventure narratives of the early 20th
century, most likely Edgar Rice Burroughs's A Princess of Mars
, and we will probably read some example of the "space opera"
tradition (such as E.E. "Doc" Smith's Lensman series). We will then
turn to the late 1930s and the emergence of the "hard SF" tradition,
associated with John W. Campbell's magazine Astounding (later
Analog ) and the authors he promoted (such as Robert A.
Heinlein or Hal Clement). Next, we will read some examples of the
alternatives to this hard SF tradition that emerged in the 50s,
especially the traditions of social satire and political SF associated
with H.L. Gold's magazine Galaxy (Frederick Pohl, C.M.
Kornbluth, Robert Sheckley, Mack Reynolds) and the more literary
narratives associated with Anthony Boucher's Fantasy and Science
Fiction (Damon Knight, Theodore Sturgeon, Judith Merrill). The
diversity that begins to emerge in U.S. science fiction in the 50s
will lead into the "New Wave" movement of the 1960s and 70s (Samuel
Delany, Roger Zelazny, Phillip K. Dick). We will give special
attention to the development of feminist SF in this period (Ursula
LeGuin, Joanna Russ). The late 70s and early 80s will be considered
as a transitional period, dominated by two figures, John Varley and
James M. Tiptree, Jr. (Alice Sheldon's pseudonym). We will end with
some readings in cyberpunk fiction and responses to it (William
Gibson, Bruce Sterling, Pat Cadigan, Neal Stephenson, Octavia Butler,
Paul DiFilippo, Gwyneth Jones, Paul McAuley). Time permitting, we may
also read some examples of the recent turn back to the tradition of
space opera (Allen Steele, Stephen Baxter, and Peter F. Hamilton).
Again if time permits, we may spend some time on the relationship
between print science fiction and film or TV.
While the course will be organized along the lines of this historical
narrative of the genre's development, the course will also focus on
some recurrent themes or critical questions. For instance, we will
consider the effects of the historical and ideological contexts for
science fiction narratives, such as the traditions of travel writing
and utopian/dystopian speculation. We will use Burroughs's A
Princess of Mars to consider how science fiction narratives can
be read as responses to the "closing of the American frontier" in the
late 19th century, by displacing the "New World" onto outer space.
We will also consider the tension between science fiction's tendency toward a realist aesthetic and its simultaneous commitment to imagining and representing new and different settings or time periods. This tension often manifests itself on the level of language: to what extent can science fiction's new "worlds" be represented in familiar terms and to what extent must authors both invent and teach readers to understand a new vocabulary and a new set of representational conventions or "rules?" The question of language also raises the question of the relationship between science fiction and mainstream literature. One of the differences often cited between genre and mainstream fiction is that works of genre fiction tend not to be read as individual works but gain their full meaning only in dialogue with the rest of the genre. We will therefore pay close attention to recurrent tropes or concepts in the fiction we read, such as time travel, alternate worlds, robots and artificial persons, and alien beings who functions as our "others" and therefore as a displaced commentary on gender and racial differences between human beings.
The texts for the course will include a combination of anthologies of
short stories and single-authored texts. Assignments will probably
include 2-3 short papers, a midterm, and a final examination.