Bültmann & Gerriets
Ultimate Island
On the Nature of British Science Fiction
von Nicholas Ruddick
Verlag: Praeger
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-0-313-27373-5
Erschienen am 30.01.1993
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 235 mm [H] x 157 mm [B] x 18 mm [T]
Gewicht: 513 Gramm
Umfang: 218 Seiten

Preis: 102,50 €
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Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

NICHOLAS RUDDICK is Associate Professor of English at the University of Regina in Canada. He is the editor of State of the Fantastic, a collection of essays (Greenwood, 1992), and the author of British Science Fiction: A Chronology, 1478-1990 (Greenwood, 1992).



Preface
Introduction: UK, SF, OK? Or, Is There Any British Science Fiction?
Critical Assumptions: The Idea of British Science Fiction
The Island of Mr. Wells
Peopling the Ruins: Disaster Fiction Before the Second World War
The Nature of the Catastrophe: Disaster Fiction After the Second World War
British Science Fiction Today and Tomorrow: A Polemical Conclusion
Works Cited



This study confronts current influential theories that science fiction is either an American phenomenon or an international one. The study rejects the idea that British science fiction is distinguishable only by its pessimistic outlook--while also rejecting the idea that other designations, such as scientific romance or speculative fiction, better fit the British product. Instead, the study traces the evolution of British science fiction, showing how H. G. Wells synthesized various strains in English literature, and how later writers, conscious of this Wellsian tradition, built upon Wells's literary achievement.
An introduction defines what might reasonably be placed under the heading British science fiction, and why. Chapter 1 examines previous critical ideas about the nature of British science fiction, revealing that most of them are based on untested assumptions. Chapter 2 explores the significance of the dominant motif of the island in British SF --a motif that suggests that British SF and mainstream English literature have been long and fruitfully intertwined. Chapters 3 and 4 deal respectively with British disaster fiction before and after the Second World War. They focus on why British science fiction has so frequently seemed obsessed with catastrophe. Chapter 5, a polemical conclusion, deals with the future of British science fiction based on its current predicament. Ultimate Island forms a theoretical counterpart to the author's recently-published British Science Fiction: A Chronology 1478-1990 (Greenwood 1992), which defines the historical scope of the field.