- Social science fiction
Social science fiction is a term used to describe a subgenre of
science fiction concerned less with technology andspace opera and more withsociological speculation about human society. In other words, it "absorbs and discusses anthropology", and speculates about human behavior and interactions. [" [http://archaeology.about.com/od/fictionstoriesandnovels/Archaeology_in_Fiction_Stories_and_Novels.htm Archaeology in Fiction, Stories, and Novels] "."about.com ".May 28 ,2008 ]Exploration of fictional societies is one of the most interesting aspects of
science fiction , allowing it to perform predictive (H.G. Wells , "The Final Circle of Paradise ") and precautionary ("Fahrenheit 451 ") functions, to criticize the contemporary world ("Antarctica-online") and to present solutions ("Walden Two "), to portray alternative societies (World of the Noon) and to examine the implications of ethical principles (Lukyanenko).ocial science fiction in English
Some roots of the genre may lie in such social speculations as
utopian and dystopian fiction , which could be considered as extreme special cases of the genre.One of the first writers who used
science fiction to explore sociological topics wasH.G. Wells , with his classic "The Time Machine " (1895) revealing the human race diverging into separate branches ofEloi s andMorlock s as a consequence of class inequality: a happy pastoral society of Elois preyed upon by the Morlocks but yet needing them to keep their world functioning. "The Sleeper Awakes " (1899, 1910) predicted the spirit of the 20th century, technically advanced, undemocratic and bloody.In the U.S. the new trend of
science fiction away from gadgets and space opera and toward speculation about the human condition was championed in pulp magazines of the 1940s by authors such asRobert A. Heinlein and byIsaac Asimov , who coined the term social science fiction to describe his own work. [In his essay appearing in "Modern Science Fiction: Its Meaning and Its Future" (ed.Reginald Bretnor , 1953).] The term is not often used today except in the context of referring specifically to the changes that took place in the 1940s, but the subgenre it defines is still a mainstay of science fiction.Many of the best known
dystopia s were inspired by reality:Aldous Huxley 's "negative utopia" "Brave New World " (1932) and, alluding to theSoviet Union , "Animal Farm " (1945) and the Western world in "Nineteen Eighty-Four " (1949) byGeorge Orwell . In 1921Yevgeny Zamyatin wrote his bitter novel "We", forecasting the "victory of forces of reason over forces of kindness" in Soviet Russia; prior toperestroika it was known only in the West and influenced both Orwell and Huxley. "The thought-destroying force" ofMcCarthyism influencedRay Bradbury 's "Fahrenheit 451 " (1953)."
The Chrysalids " (1955) byJohn Wyndham explored the society of several telepathic children in a world hostile to such differences.Robert Sheckley studied polar civilizations of criminal and stability in his 1960 novel "The Status Civilization ".The modern era of social science fiction began with the 1960s, when authors such as
Harlan Ellison ,Brian Aldiss , andUrsula K. Le Guin wrote novels and stories that reflected real-world political developments. Ellison's main theme was the protest against increasing militarism. LeGuin in "The Left Hand of Darkness " (1969) explored non-traditional sexual relations.Kurt Vonnegut wrote "Slaughterhouse-Five " (1969), which used the science fiction theme oftime-travel to explore anti-war, moral, and sociological themes.Frederik Pohl 's series "Gateway" (1977 — 2004) combined social science fiction withhard science fiction . Among the finest modern exponents of social science fiction in the Campbellian/Heinlein tradition isL. Neil Smith ,Fact|date=March 2008 who is considered the heir toRobert A. Heinlein 'sindividualism andlibertarianism in science fiction,Fact|date=March 2008 and who wrote both "The Probability Broach " (1981) and "Pallas", which dealt with alternative "sideways in time" futures and what a libertarian society would look like.Kim S. Robinson explored different models of the future in "
Three Californias Trilogy " (1984, 1988, 1990) .Joss Whedon 's "Firefly" (a 2002 television series) and its 2005 sequel "Serenity" (a feature film) conjured up a world where freedom, rebellion against centralized authority, and western as well as Chinese cultural influences shape a society 500 years in the future. The hardware (space ships, space travel) is secondary (except for the widespread use ofgun s for self-defense, which shapes the society's social customs. As Heinlein himself said, "An armed society is a polite society.")The Saga of Recluce (1991 — now), byL. E. Modesitt, Jr. represents a fusion of science fiction andfantasy that can be described as social science fiction. The 13 books of the series describe the changing relationships between two technologically advanced cultures and the cultures of a primitive world to which each is involuntarily transported. Themes of gender stereotyping, sexism, ethics, economics, environmentalism and politics are explored in the course of the series, which examines the world through the eyes of all its protagonists.The genre in the Eastern Bloc
All science fiction of the
Soviet era had to subscribe to communist ideology, or else the author could face serious consequences — from a ban against being published to death underStalin , imprisonment or psychiatric treatment underBrezhnev . There were poor and opportunistic works, there were works of talent touched by ideology (e.g. 1923 "Aelita" or 1926 "The Garin Death Ray " byAlexei Tolstoy ), there were non-ideological works describing the happy future of humankind (some works ofKir Bulychev andIvan Efremov ), but also such writers asBulgakov , Shvarts and Strugatsky who chose the hard way of "balancing" on the edge, struggling not to betray their views while avoiding punishment for expressing them.The 1920s brought Platonov and
Zamyatin , but it was not until the time of Perestroika that their works were published in the Soviet Union.An "exception which proves the rule" is an example of critique under Stalin —
Evgeny Shvarts play "The Dragon" (1944), showing howtotalitarianism thrusts its roots into the hearts of the people.The next period of science fiction in the Soviet Union was shaped by the greater liberalization of the
Khrushchev regime, advances of science, and the beginning of the space age.In 1957
Ivan Efremov wrote the utopian "", revealing a harmonious space-exploring civilization of the distant future, whose culture took much from antique art. His further works included "Razor's Edge" (1963) emphasizing narrowness of the way of successful development of a civilization, and the dystopian "The Bull's Hour " (1968).Amongst the best known social science fiction is the
Noon Universe ofArkady and Boris Strugatsky , designed to be a future world of "communism", where creative work is considered the highest purpose , but unlike utopian worlds, Noon Universe is settled by real people. The rise of reaction, initiated by Khrushchev's public criticism of modern art and literature in 1963, showed to Strugatsky that "while for us communism was a world of freedom and creativity, for them it was the society, in which the population fulfilled immediately and with pleasure all precepts of the Party and the government" [ru icon Boris Strugatsky, [http://rusf.ru/abs/books/bns-03.htm Comments to the traversed, 1961-1963] ] . This largely affected their "Hard to be a God " (1963).Suppression of the
Prague Spring in 1968 ultimately ruined Strugatsky's dreams about the Soviet rule. Another Noon Universe novel, "Prisoners of Power " (1969), somehow alluding toSoviet Union describesMaxim Kammerer , crashed on an unknown planet in the wrecked Land of Fathers, and his attempt to destroy the system of transmission which deprived his new friends of ability of critical thinking.Social science fiction turned out to be a powerful means to respond to real situation in communist countries. While communist rules didn't allow any critique, one of possibilities was to veil it as that some
science fiction -ish world. In the 1980s the genre called 'sociological fantasy' ("fantastyka sociologiczna") arose in thePeople's Republic of Poland . It focused on the development of societies, generally dominated by totalitarian governments. This genre was represented by writers likeJanusz A. Zajdel ("Limes Inferior ", "Paradyzja "),Edmund Wnuk-Lipiński ("Apostezjon" trilogy),Adam Wiśniewski-Snerg orMarek Oramus . Books from that genre were based in different times (usually in future), and usually were pretext for analysing structures of the described societies, having been full of allusions to reality. After therevolutions of 1989 , when using real world examples became as safe in formerEastern Bloc countries as in their Western counterparts, this genre mostly transformed itself into apolitical fiction , represented by writers such asRafał A. Ziemkiewicz .Post-Soviet social science fiction
Anti-communism was a sort of national idea in
Russia only for several years — it was well explored so usually you can find only bits and bobs of it:*"Arrows of
Perun with separable warheads", a 1994 novella byBraider and Chadovich depicts a small totalitarian state, founded by personnel of a Soviet missile shaft.
*"Search for designation or Twenty seventh theorem of ethics " (1994) and "Devil amongst people " (1991) are late novels ofStrugatsky , exploring often the tragic Soviet epoch.
*Evgeny Lukin 's [http://rusf.ru/english/lukin/] 2000 novel "Scarlet aura of a protopartorg" is set in a "horizontal" world of little peer countries — debris of collapsed Russia. Background involves satire on Russian politicians and PR battles of 1990s — lie and truth means nothing, but people's trust does. TotalitarianChristian Orthodox Communists and democratic League of Wizards use different methods to gain popularity, which in turn gives them a magical ability to commit marvels. The action concerns intrigues between two states which reveal more similarities than may seem.
*Vyacheslav Rybakov in 2003 novel "In the adjacent year in Moscow" explores a sickening world of Russia torn apart into tiny countries, ruled by Darths and Vaders of the West and having no own sincere desires. Rybakov lais emphasis on culture studies and a trial to regain national unity and idea, as an old scientist Ivan Obiwankin goes in a mission to install an anti-gravity device on the old Buran shuttle.An important study of
consumer capitalism on the Russian soil was carried byVictor Pelevin , who described Russian "wild capitalism" in his 1999 "Generation "П" ", and continued this theme, describing the situation in his 2006 novel Empire V as "anonymous dictatorship", aimed to trap people's minds in a rush for riches.Since disbandment of
KGB in 1991, dissident trend in science fiction transformed as well. Government in 1999 Rejection ("Wybrakovka") byOleg Divov responded on rise of crime in 1990s by creating the service rejecting millions criminals out of life; the book raised discussions which hardly subsided now (inaccurate quote of the main hero, "the world envies Slavian Union, because it's the only country where human rights are really guaranteed — but rights of law-abiding citizens."). Hero ofSergey Lukyanenko 's Spectrum (2002) prefers not to seek troubles cooperating with FSB, though taking it half-ironically ("Or do you consider that government is able to exist without counterintelligence?"). Looking broader, society ruled by intelligence services disturbs citizens, but democracy is unable to react on sharp threats, as shown in the duology Soft Landing, Year of the Lemming byAlexander Gromov . But what about personal freedom? Here comes a revelation, because it's a function not only of condition of society but of person's will as well. As a polar case, Pavel Gusev considers himself free in harsh world of Divov's Rejection. Freedom doesn't make happier lives of several male refugee's in matriarchal world of Gromov's The First of the Mohicans, but it makes them people; the male oppositioner finds it possible to fight for this world against alien threat, rememberingHelots who became mentally free fighting forSpartian s. Moreover, true democracy may be build only by responsible people able to refresh the tree of liberty with their blood, as Gromov showd in Antarctica-online. This approaches theme ofindividualism ; world dying since people's assurance there's definitely someone to care for them is theme of several late stories byLeonid Kaganov . However this fails to be the essence of modern Russian sci-fi, only a slice cut in this plane.Social science fiction as investigation of various social systems without evident political subtext is well represented in works of many writers, such as
Alexander Gromov ,Sergey Lukyanenko ("Knights of Forty Islands", "The Stars Are Cold Toys " — "Star Shadow "),Marina and Sergey Dyachenko . In some sense writers prolongate human-centered tradition of Russian classic literature of XIX century in contemporary themes and prose."Eurochinese humanist"
Holm van Zaichik (pen name ofVyacheslav Rybakov andIgor Alimov ) is known for the world of Orduss, a fictionary country unifying China, Russia, Near East, forming a humane society with rich culture.Examples of social science fiction from the 1940s
*
Isaac Asimov , "Nightfall", 1941
*Isaac Asimov ,The Foundation Series , 1942-
*Robert A. Heinlein , ""If This Goes On—" ", 1940
*Robert A. Heinlein , "Beyond This Horizon ", 1942
*George R. Stewart , "Earth Abides ", 1949ee also
*
Fable
*Libertarian science fiction
*List of social fiction writers and stories Notes
Further reading
* "Modern Science Fiction: Its Meaning and Its Future", eds. Reginald Bretnor and John Wood Campbell, 2nd edition, 1979, ISBN 0-911682-23-6.
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