SF/F Commentary

The Michio Kaku Meme: Thoughts on the World of Science Fiction

Over and Big Think, Michio Kaku has posted a bunch of questions he wants fans to answer for a project he’s working on. I don’t know what the project is, but if Michio Kaku is involved, then it’s bound to be awesome. So, considering that his questions are blog worthy, I thought I’d start a little meme. If you’d like to participate, all you have to do is steal the questions for yourself and answer them. Make sure to link here, and, if you want, post the link over at Big Think so Mr. Kaku can see what you wrote. Simple enough, right? Here we go:Which ideas from Science Fiction would you most like to see become reality and why? This question is kind of enormous. There are a lot of ideas that I want to see become a reality, but putting it all here would take up far too much space. So, I’m going to narrow it to three: Faster-than-light TravelI want to see the stars and other planets in my lifetime. I can’t do that when it takes longer than a single human lifetime to get to the nearest star. Just imagine seeing other planets and maybe finding a habitable one. It’d be nothing short of amazing. The Uber Cure or TreatmentIn science fiction, you sometimes see futures where we’ve cured most of the major human ailments, or, at the very least, have come up with extremely effective ways to fight off cancer and so on. For me, this is a must have, since I’m a cancer survivor and have an unreasonable amount of compassion for people who are suffering diseases and ailments that we should have cures or reasonably effective treatments for. Sadly, we seem more interested in spending money to build things to blow one another up than to find cures or improve food production to combat starvation, etc. Intelligent and Self-aware RobotsMaybe I’m stupid for wanting this. We’ve seen so many movies in which robots rise up and try to take over or exterminate us. Yet, I can’t help wanting truly self-aware, human-like robots in this world. Having robot friends and companions, playing robot games, and all of that sounds like great fun to me. Maybe if we’re smart and design them just the right way, and treat them appropriately, we won’t have to worry about all of that death and destruction stuff. Maybe… What is your favorite Science Fiction movie and why? Star Wars (the original trilogy). It’s the science fiction series I grew up with. How can I not include it as my favorite? I’ve seen Star Wars more times than I can count, and I will continue to re-watch it in any format I can get it in so long as I live. The series is beautiful, action-packed, fun, thrilling, and altogether wonderful. It’s like childhood in movie form. It’s pure imagination. What’s not to love? What is your favorite scene from a Science Fiction movie?The entire sequence in Star Wars: Return of the Jedi from the moment the rebel fleet appears above Endor to the destruction of the second Death Star. I remember watching that scene with awe when I was younger. It’s visually gorgeous and it’s just freaking cool. Say what you will about Ewoks, you all know the fight was entertaining. And how about that space battle? That’s the one big difference between the originals and the prequels for me. In the new films, the space battles just aren’t as impressive. They’re CGed and seem too fake to me; I think they’re a mark of how George Lucas has fallen into the CG trap with directors like Michael Bay. But the originals were just amazing. Yes, the visuals are flawed, and obviously so, but they are still so much more “real” than anything else. The miniatures used are beautiful. Besides, the ending of Return of the Jedi is quite powerful, if you ask me.Who is your favorite Science Fiction character and why?That’s an impossible question to answer. It doesn’t matter who I pick, I’m leaving someone out that deserves to be mentioned. So, hopefully people will forgive me if I play the exclusionary type and pick Captain Malcolm Reynolds from Firefly. He’s witty, gruff, and almost everything a good spaceship captain should be. Plus, he’s poetic. See for yourself: What is your favorite Science Fiction device, machine or weapon?For very personal reasons, the hypospray needle-less vaccine gizmo from Star Trek. I hate needles something awful. I can deal with being stabbed by them, but there’s no reason for us to still have needles for administering vaccines and medicines. Where are my hypospray things? Hmm? Where? And there you have it! So, what are your responses to these questions?

SF/F Commentary

A Final Answer to the Question of Questions: Is Science Fiction Dying?

No, it is not.  Now shut up already.  The next person who raises this question, even if they’re going to say “no” in their response, will get an unwelcome at-home meeting from me and my polystyrene robot. Yes, the robot has a ray gun, and before Adam comes along and tries to tell me that a ray gun isn’t science fiction without an explanation for its power source, I’m going to say that it is powered by the tears from everyone who said George Lucas ruined their childhood with the prequel movies.  That’s about as science fictional as you can get. That is all.

SF/F Commentary

A Scifi Strange Anthology? Publishers, Pay Attention!

Jason Sanford recently posted the table of contents for a dream anthology of scifi strange stories that you all need to see.  The list mostly contains stories available online (primarily because Sanford is calling it an online anthology) and is perhaps one of the most comprehensive and diverse ToCs I have seen in a while.  It includes stories by Rachel Swirsky, Eugie Foster, Nnedi Okorafor, Ted Chiang, Jason Sanford, and many more.  You should definitely check out the post to see what he’s picked, and if any publishers are paying attention out there, you should consider publishing this anthology!  Seriously. If you’re unfamiliar with scifi strange, then you should check out Sanford’s two posts on the subject:  here and here.  Sanford also has a list of links to other places where the term has been discussed. Now I need to do some reading…

SF/F Commentary

Question for Readers: How did you find your favorite books?

We all know there are too many books for any one person to read each year (except for Larry Nolen, who reads about nine books a second and shoots laser beams from his eyes), but one thing that I don’t think we talk about enough is how we discover the books that we read. So, I’m going to throw some questions out to you, the readers: How did you find your favorite books? What process do you use to find new books? How do you know if a book you’ve discovered is a book you’re going to buy?  Is it the cover?  The back cover text?  The secret code words on the first page used by publishers to send subliminal messages to their assassins? Tell me!  I really want to know.

SF/F Commentary

Why Science Fiction is Important to the Third World (Part One)

A little over a month ago, one of my professors asked me a question that, at the time, I was unable to answer.  That question has haunted me since, largely because I really should have had a good answer at the time.  The question was: Why do you think science fiction and other “fantastic” literary forms are important in the third world? A simple enough question, don’t you think?  Or is it? Questions like this are rarely applied to other forms of literature, specifically those works which are published as “general” or “literary” fiction.  Only fantastic forms of literature seem to have to defend themselves in an academic context.  I doubt my professor meant it as an attack, but it’s something that genre readers and writers have had to deal with in attack form before, which means that asking the question, regardless of the intentions, always stings a bit of the past.  The question equally applies to literature as a whole, though, since literature has had to defend itself from the anti-library crowd, the anti-English-department crowd, and so on (all of which are the embodiment of evil, if you ask me).  But the point of this post, and the posts that will follow it, is to address the question thrown at science fiction. One reason that I think science fiction is an important literary genre, particularly in the third world, is that it is a safe genre.  It is the only genre that allows us to see the darkness of our past in way that also allows us to disengage from it.  Science fiction deals with both the present and the past without actually being there, which means that we, as readers, can choose to remove ourselves from the present (as influenced by the past) and “escape” into an unknown future.  Yes, science fiction is often allegorical, but it doesn’t have to be read as such; there’s no requirement to put the pieces of the past together.  With general literature, there is, since it is often planted immediately in the moment, whether that be in the present, or the past.  Reading general literature is like reading about ourselves as we are now; it’s reading about people that weren’t in situations that were.  Science fiction is the antithesis to this because it allows readers to get away. From a critical perspective, this means that readers are able to see the light and dark of the human soul, but from the perspective of a place that does not necessarily conjure feelings of regret or shame.  Since it is not about something that has actually happened–in the sense that the events in a science fiction story, outside of allegory, are entirely fictional–readers have no reason to face “reality.”  It becomes a safe zone in which to experience our weakness and faults and to experience the conditions that make all of us different and the same at the same time (different cultures of human beings).  That’s not to say that it has to be this way, or that it always is.  People read science fiction in very different ways.  To pretend that there is a set reading practice for SF is ridiculous at best.  But what is different, in my opinion, between SF and general literature is that SF doesn’t demand that you read it in a certain way.  It doesn’t make it a requirement for you to feel the regret or shame of the past.  When people call SF an “escapist” genre, we should be quite pleased with that, since it is one of the few genres that is both an “escape” and a “reflection”–fantasy, in contrast, is usually only the first (“escape”), since it is rarely about the past or present (though New Weird might have changed that somewhat). That’s what, to me, is one of the most important aspects of science fiction in a third world context.  Third world writers can use the furniture of science fiction to tell stories about their present and past without actually writing about either.  The genre represents a gateway for third world writers to expose readers of SF to the themes, problems, and issues that plague third world nations without forcing people to deal with the immediacy of the moment.  Perhaps it is naive of me to say, but I think this makes it possible for us to avoid repeating our past mistakes.  Whether we’ll actually pay attention well enough to make that happen is the real issue (history, sadly, suggests that we won’t). Science fiction’s “safe” status isn’t a perfect one, though.  Yes, there are texts that inject science fiction elements into the present (or the very near future), and the alternate history genre, which many consider to be science fiction, even though I do not, is littered with examples that contradict the safeness of the genre.  But, generally speaking, I think I’m right here.  Science fiction is disconnected from the past and present in a direct sense; it is the ultimate form of cognitive estrangement–the ultimate novum.

SF/F Commentary

The New Template: Changes Around These Parts

If you’re one of my RSS or email subscribers, you might have missed that this blog has been going through a design overhaul.  The old template was, understandably, very “old school,” and did not fairly represent the best of WISB’s potential.  So, I set out to create a new template using Blogger’s template designer (a handy little thing, if you ask me), and came up with something I think works quite nicely. What’s new on WISB now that I have a different design?  Here’s a list: One sidebar instead of two.  That one sidebar is slightly wider as a result. A wider post body section.  The previous section was a little thin. A sleeker look.  You’ll have to see to understand what that means. A Formspring “ask me a question” box in the sidebar.  You can ask questions anonymously, by the way. An updated header image.  You should see it.  The new text on the image is awesome.  The image is the same, but instead of boring standard text over it with the title of my blog, I now have nice text that makes it look much more appealing.  At least, I think so. Pages!  The great thing about the pages feature is that it allows me to move whole chunks of text and links off of the sidebar.  You’ll now find pages for The Skiffy and Fanty Show podcast, my fiction (including The World in the Satin Bag, free shorts, excerpts, and so on), my bibliography (including publications and conference appearances), Survival By Storytelling Magazine (which is still available for purchase, by the way), my review and advertising policies, ways to contact me, and info about the blog and me (i.e. the About page).  Plus, instead of burying my contact information in the sidebar, it is now available in a handy location:  the Contact page.  Good stuff! Some things have remained the same, such as the color of the website, though some text colors are different.  I didn’t want to change the color of the site primarily because that would require me to change the header image, unless I went with black.  Blue is my favorite color, but the header image, which is one of my favorite things about this blog, only works with yellows and greens (or black). Feel free to let me know what you think.  If something looks ugly, then I’d like to know about it.  Otherwise, welcome to the new millennium of WISB-ness.

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