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Into the Unknown: The Evolution of Science Fiction from Frances Godwin to H. G. Wells
Author: | Robert M. Philmus |
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University of California Press, 1970 |
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Book Type: | Non-Fiction |
Genre: | Science-Fiction |
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Synopsis
Robert M. Philmus' Into the Unknown will be welcomed as a map of the tradition of science fiction from its beginnings in English through the period of H. G. Wells' great achievements in the genre. The author deals not only with relatively well-known works such as Gulliver's Travels, Frankenstein, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and The Time Machine, but also with obscure or neglected fantasies such as those of Robert Cromie, whose Crack of Doom (1895) narrates the fate of a scientist who proposes to destroy the world with an atom bomb.
This study is not, however, a literary history or a series of synopses. It begins by defining science fiction as a kind of fantasy making use of a "scientific" rationale, and proceeds to show how that rationale enables the writer to transcend pure fantasy. What emerges from the essay is not a simple definition of the genre but an idea of how science fiction works, of its thematic inventiveness, of its range and possibilities. The book is indispensable for scholar and aficionado alike.
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