Description
Locates science fiction as a distinct narrative form with unique potential to conceive of society as a whole and oppose limited views of culture presented in the orthodox modern novel.
About the Author
Andrew Milner is Emeritus Professor at Monash University, Australia. His publications include Locating Science Fiction (2012), Again, Dangerous Visions: Essays in Cultural Materialism (2018), (with J. R. Burgmann) Science Fiction and Climate Change: A Sociological Approach (2020). Peter Murphy is Adjunct Professor at La Trobe University and James Cook University, Australia. His publications include The Political Economy of Prosperity: Successful Societies and Productive Cultures (2020), The Collective Imagination: The Creative Spirit of Free Societies (2012) and Dialectic of Romanticism: A Critique of Modernism (2004). David Roberts is Emeritus Professor, School of Languages and Cultures, Monash University, Australia. His publications include History of the Present: The Contemporary and its Culture (2021), The Total Work of Art in European Modernism (2011) and Dialectic of Romanticism: A Critique of Modernism (2004).
Reviews
Innovative, provocative, and at a level of intellectual seriousness far too rare. ... It should stand as a striking and essential contribution to the long-running debate about sf and form. * Science Fiction Studies *
Science Fiction and Narrative Form argues that, amid escalating anthropogenic crises, science fiction is essential: only the genre's historicizing imperative and epic scale, its peculiar temporalities and world-building strategies, its absent gods and invisible hands, can make up for the parochial, exhausted literary novel. Magisterial, nuanced - and highly recommended. * Mark Bould, Reader in Film & Literature, Faculty of Arts, Creative Industries, and Education, University of West England, UK *
Book Information
ISBN 9781350350786
Author Professor David Roberts
Format Paperback
Page Count 240
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC