Format:
VIII, 264 S.
ISBN:
1781381194
,
9781781381199
Series Statement:
Liverpool science fiction texts and studies 48
Content:
Irish Science Fiction revisits a critical paradigm that has often been overlooked or dismissed by science fiction scholars - namely, that science fiction can be understood in terms of myth. Science fiction springs from pseudo-science rather than 'proper' science, because pseudo-science is more easily converted into narrative; in this book it is argued that different cultures produce distinct pseudo-sciences, and thus, unique science fiction traditions. Fennell's innovative framework is used to examine Irish science fiction from the 1850s to the present day, covering material written both in Irish and in English. Considering science fiction novels and short stories in their historical context, Irish Science Fiction analyses a body of literature that has largely been ignored by Irish literature researchers. This is the first book to focus exclusively on Irish science fiction, and the first to consider Irish-language stories and novels alongside works published in English. -- Provided by publisher
Note:
1. Mad science and the Empire : Fitz-James O'Brien and Robert Cromie -- 2. 'Future War' and gender in nineteenth-century Ireland -- 3. Nationalist fantasies of the early twentieth century -- 4. States of emergency : Irish SF During World War II -- 5. The 1960s : Lemass, modernization and the Cold War -- 6. The Wrong history : Bob Shaw, James White and the Troubles -- 7. Exotic Doom : the SF of Ian McDonald -- 8. The Dystopian decades : from Recession to Tiger and back again -- 9. The Shape of Irish SF to come.
Language:
English
Subjects:
English Studies
Keywords:
Irland
;
Science-Fiction-Literatur
;
Geschichte 1850-
Author information:
Fennell, Jack 1983-