Shaun Duke

Shaun Duke is an aspiring writer, a reviewer, and an academic. He is currently an Assistant Professor of Digital Rhetoric and Writing at Bemidji State University. He received his PhD in English from the University of Florida and studies science fiction, postcolonialism, digital fan cultures, and digital rhetoric.

World in the Satin Bag

A List of Recommendations…Sorta

Well I wrote a post some days back asking for your thoughts, but nobody really jumped in on that convo. So, I thought what I’d do is throw in my two cents of what I think are best examples, based on what I have read, of the following genres. I haven’t read everything, so if you don’t agree or have a different suggestion, please leave a comment! Military Science Fiction — The Forever War by Joe HaldemanSpace Opera — Old Man’s War by John Scalzi (although this is more military SF)Cyberpunk (anything you guys would suggest other than Neuromancer by William Gibson) — Spin State by Chris MoriartySteampunk — The Steam Magnate by Dana Copithorne (partially because it is really damn good and partially because it’s the only book I’ve ever read that I could call steampunk)Post-Apocalyptic — Other than 1984…I don’t know…Cell by Stephen King, but that’s not a great example, though I liked the book.Hard Science Fiction — Foundation by Isaac AsimovHumorous SF — Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas AdamsSoft SF (or Socio-SF) — Ender’s Game by Orson Scott CardDystopian SF — 1984 by George OrwellPost-Cyberpunk — I have no idea…I didn’t know there was a Post-Cyberpunk movement until recently…High Fantasy (other than Tolkien) — I can’t think of a really good example of this other than Tolkien. Some mediocre examples, sure, but nothing really concrete.Urban Fantasy — Peeps by Scott Westerfeld (though it’s sort of SFish)Dark Fantasy — The Book of Lost Things by John Connolly (this is dark YA fantasy actually)Heroic Fantasy (again, other than Tolkien) — Shadowfall by James ClemensScience Fantasy (or Scifantasy) — Bright of the Sky by Kay Kenyon.

World in the Satin Bag

We Still Have A Long Way To Go!

I was originally going to do this as a video blog, but decided the subject couldn’t wait until I could get the time to actually write down all the main points, find the time to do a video blog, etc. So I’m doing it here. Now, Vandermeer already discussed this over on Clarkesworld, at least to some extent, and I too have talked about it before. I have to agree to some extent that indeed people are rather preoccupied with the idea of speculative fiction being against the mainstream or everything else. That is very true. In reality, specfic is practically mainstream anyway. The books are generally selling very well. Fantasy has exploded, partially thanks to Harry Potter, and while science fiction may not have superb sales, it too is doing very well in the fact that many books are actually being turned into films. Whether these films are of good quality and represent the greatness of the literature they are attempting to portray is an argument for another time.One point, though, that I have to make, and have made, is that despite the popularity of specfic, despite its acceptance by the masses as a valuable form of literature, it is still being fought against by the academia. I will not deny that there are now colleges that teach specfic and neither will I deny that a lot of colleges do offer some courses in the subject. What must be realized, however, is that there are very few colleges that actually offer degrees in the field of specfic–mainly science fiction or fantasy–and of the colleges that offer coursework in the field the genre is not taken seriously at all. I will give you an example:I took a science fiction & fantasy lit course at my previous school, a community college. Now, before one treads upon the quality of community colleges I will make a comparison to UC Santa Cruz, where I am studying now: they are almost exactly the same, with some very minor differences in leniency in the community college. The class, I will admit, was absolutely awesome, but for different reasons than one might think. It was a course that didn’t look at SF & F nearly in the same light as a class studying British lit. In fact, the class was almost like a giant forum for discussion, with minor amounts of reading. There was no reading into the history of SF & F, nor into the history of the authors we were reading. Given that, the course was basically open discussion, which never lent itself to deep analysis or otherwise thorough understanding of the text itself.This is, unfortunately, the model by which many colleges treat specfic, if they deal with the genre at all. Most colleges don’t offer much in the way of studying specfic. This is an issue that has to be rectified if specfic is to be taken seriously in the literary community. More degree programs have to be offered that allow you to focus in the field. Four or five major programs in the world isn’t enough. There is an enormous field of analysis available by studying specfic. Science fiction, for example, is constantly raising questions about our society, our technology, and our species, drawing upon everything from physics to sociology. Just as one could look upon the many literary theories of criticism and draw information from a literary text, so too can you use such things on science fiction, meaning that a school could very well address science fiction texts without having to fully change their way of thinking.While obviously specfic has come a long way in the last fifty years, heck, even in the last twenty, it still has a long way to go. People should stop complaining that specfic isn’t being accepted, because it is, but they should strive, or rather, push, to see specfic involved in teaching students at all levels about literature since specfic is extremely influential in our society–a fact that cannot logically be denied. Despite where it stands now, we still have a long way to go everyone. Let’s get over that next milestone and start claiming victory. For now, realize that we’ve achieved success in one arena.

World in the Satin Bag

10,000 Hits! Hooray For Me!

That’s right, I’ve achieved 10,000 hits! Well, actually, I probably had that a month ago, but since I haven’t had Sitemeter on this blog the whole time of its existence I can only count what I have actually seen. So, 10,000! It’s a milestone, or at least it feels like it. It might seem like chump change to everyone else, but it means a lot of me.So, I thought since I have hit this sort of important point, I’d point all the top ten posts with the most hits and also my top ten favorite posts on the site. So here goes. Most Hits: Why I Would Sell Out Like Paolini (thanks to the lovely people of Anti-shurtugal for making this post stand out above all the others) Killing Speculative Literature (thanks to SF Signal) Literary Nazis Part Two (thanks to SF Signal) Literary Nazis Part One (thanks to SF Signal) Dystopian Commonalities in SF (thanks SF Signal) The Harry Potter Fiasco Cover Designs, Yet Another Take More Reasons Why I Hate J. K. Rowling The First SF & F Canons Realistic Fantasy Required My Favorites (other than ones mentioned above and pretty much in no particular order after #2)): Chapter One: Hansor Manor Chapter Thirty-One: Of Captain Norp and the Last Journey WISB vBlog v.0.07 (because it’s my first!) Don’t Write Speculative Fiction If… Sacrificing Quality For Style in Spec. Lit The Insignificance of Earth My Obsession With Golden Age Science Fiction John Scalzi on Teenage Writing (I’m a phase three!) Meme: Five Things I Want To Write (I’m tagging everyone who hasn’t done it yet) Space Travel De-mystified Check them out and thanks to every single one of you who has come by, even if you’ve only been here a few times, or a few hundred times. Thanks so much!

World in the Satin Bag

Calling All Readers!

First things first, you guys really should get involved over at the Science Fiction and Fantasy Canon Project. Now, for the nature of this post. I’m very curious to know what everyone thinks are the, shall we say, ‘pioneering’ works of the following subgenres. Meaning what works do you think actually popularized these subgenres, even if they weren’t the first of their kind? Military Science FictionSpace OperaCyber Punk (anything you guys would suggest other than Neuromancer by William Gibson)SteampunkPost-ApocalypticHard Science FictionHumorous SFSoft SF (or Socio-SF)Dystopian SFPost-CyberpunkHigh Fantasy (other than Tolkien)Urban FantasyDark FantasyHeroic Fantasy (again, other than Tolkien)Science Fantasy (or Scifantasy) Any help here would be great. Varying responses would be appreciated too! Maybe I’ll have to do a poll for all these. In any case, let me know what you guys think! (Don’t click the read more, there isn’t any more after this)

Book Reviews, World in the Satin Bag

WISB vBlog v.0.07

So this is my first vBlog. It’s not really all that informative, but so be it. It’s also a little behind. I finished reading The Steam Magnate by Dana Copithorne already. Oh well. Enjoy! Links:Aio PublishingEdge/TesseractF&SF Book Lovin’ BlogGraeme’s Fantasy ReviewsThe Book Swede (Don’t click the read more, there isn’t any more after this)

Book Reviews, World in the Satin Bag

Book Review Up!

Just a quick note: my book review of The Steam Magnate by Dana Copithorne is up at SQT’s blog. Check it out here! Also, I’m hoping to do a short interview with the author soon. Look forward to that. And, I’m going to start video-blogging on a semi-monthly basis. I have one I’m going to put up as soon as I can load it. I’m not very bright about things like compression and the like. If anyone has any recommendations of free software I can use to reduce the size of my files without losing too much quality that would be wonderful. Thanks! (Don’t click the read more, there isn’t any more after this)

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