Reading by Starlight: Postmodern Science FictionReading by Starlight explores the characteristics in the writing, marketing and reception of science fiction which distinguish it as a genre. Damien Broderick explores the postmodern self-referentiality of the sci-fi narrative, its intricate coded language and discursive `encyclopaedia'. He shows how, for perfect understanding, sci-fi readers must learn the codes of these imaginary worlds and vocabularies, all the time picking up references to texts by other writers. Reading by Starlight includes close readings of paradigmatic cyberpunk texts and writings by SF novelists and theorists including Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke, Brian Aldiss, Patrick Parrinder, Kim Stanley Robinson, John Varley, Roger Zelazny, William Gibson, Fredric Jameson and Samuel R. Delaney. |
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Page viii
... paraliterary Critiquing the object 6 DREAMS OF REASON AND UNREASON Out of the kindergarten Familiarising the estranged Monstrous dreams Cyberpunk Value - added trash Beyond satire 7 THE STARS MY DISSERTATION Learning the tropes Time's ...
... paraliterary Critiquing the object 6 DREAMS OF REASON AND UNREASON Out of the kindergarten Familiarising the estranged Monstrous dreams Cyberpunk Value - added trash Beyond satire 7 THE STARS MY DISSERTATION Learning the tropes Time's ...
Page xi
... paraliterature entirely ) , its very name , for all its acquired taint of comical vulgarity , evokes that central paradox of mutual incomprehension . A theorised interest in sf endures precisely because of the unease with which science ...
... paraliterature entirely ) , its very name , for all its acquired taint of comical vulgarity , evokes that central paradox of mutual incomprehension . A theorised interest in sf endures precisely because of the unease with which science ...
Page xii
... paraliterary form of narrative nearer in many respects to the mimetically estranged experience of dreaming than to the methodologically speculative or cognitive . Several of these unwieldy but useful terms find their major sf ...
... paraliterary form of narrative nearer in many respects to the mimetically estranged experience of dreaming than to the methodologically speculative or cognitive . Several of these unwieldy but useful terms find their major sf ...
Page 20
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Page 22
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Contents
3 | |
GENERIC ENGINEERING | 21 |
GENRE OR MODE? | 38 |
THE USES OF OTHERNESS | 49 |
READING THE EPISTEME | 64 |
DREAMS OF REASON AND UNREASON | 75 |
THE STARS MY DISSERTATION | 89 |
MAKING UP WORLDS | 103 |
SF AS A MODULAR CALCULUS | 128 |
THE MULTIPLICITY OF WORLDS OF OTHERS | 137 |
THE AUTUMNAL CITY | 153 |
Notes | 159 |
Bibliography | 180 |
xi | 193 |
74 | 195 |
ALLOGRAPHY AND ALLEGORY | 117 |
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Common terms and phrases
Aldiss alien allegory attempts attention become called Chapter character cited close codes cognitive common constituted constructed course critical culture death definition Delany Delany's detail developed discourse discussion dream early effect episteme especially example experience fantasy figure force future genre given human ibid icons images imagination important interesting Intersection invention Jameson John kind language late later least less limits linguistic literary literature Lobey Marxism means mega-text metaphor mode move myth narrative never notes novel object offers once perhaps play position possible postmodern precisely question reader reading reality recent reference relation remains science fiction scientific seems semiotic sense sf's signifiers social space specific Stars story Strange structure tell textual theory things thinking tropes true turn universe volume writing