No, we must embrace the pluralistic babble of a horde of faceless PUBLISHERS.And then a bunch of other writers came along and both expanded and redefined the genre a dozen different ways over the past century with a dozen sub-genres and categories and trends along the way.
So you're saying that science fiction doesn't mean anything? We must embrace pluralistic babble of a horde of faceless writers?
Because at the end of the day, it's the major publishing houses that really decide what gets printed and what gets trashed, the growing proliferation of self-publish/ebooks notwithstanding. Both the printing houses and the television industry have developed amongst themselves a very consistent definition of what "science fiction" is, and it doesn't even SLIGHTLY agree with yours.
Any story that takes place against the backdrop of a specific scientific premise, without which the story could not be told. The technology of the story could be the plot's driving force, or may merely provide the setting for the story.What's your definition of science fiction?
Science fiction comes in two varieties: "Hard science fiction" with a specific focus on natural sciences and technological developments in a highly realistic context, and "soft science fiction" which focusses less (if at all) on the physical laws and technological hardware and more on the "soft sciences" of philosophy, politics and sociology. For example: a hard science fiction novel would explore the technology of futuristic space travel and the equipment and weapons involved while soft science fiction would focus more on the social/political problems inherent in space travel without really focussing on the technology. Most science fiction stories will try to do both, but the degree to which they do one or the other defines wether it is "hard" or "soft."
Will it serve this conversation better? Simple: to re-emphasize that "science" does not include ONLY physics and technology.
The second part is unnecessary. Good science fiction stories usually do, but a bad science fiction story that rambles on for pages and pages and never seems to ever make a point (Starship Troopers was kinda like this) would also fit the genre.My definition is pretty simple. I have argued that it must involve both science and fiction. It is concerned with the implications of our future advancements (i.e., science).
Except WE are not mapping it. Those definitions have been settled pretty rigidly by the people who actually write and--more importantly, publish--this stuff. There's a specific target audience for both varieties of science fiction and publishers like to know who that audience is when trying to decide whether to green light a manuscript or not.I say there is. You can call it "soft" science fiction if you wish (give it a name) but what matters is the conceptual space we're mapping.
True as that is, Verne and Wells no longer define the genre. As Orson Scott Card put it once, after the 1970s the ceiling fell out of science fiction... and so did the floor.We can define the tension as hard/soft, if you wish, but the underlying tension between the poles of Verne (hard) and Wells (soft) remains.
So can non-speculative science fiction that uses bullshit/pseudoscience as a backdrop for its story. Your failure to recognize that is one of the reasons you still think "Star Wars" is a fantasy story.How am I not getting that? Speculative future-oriented fiction, by definition, has to make creative guesses beyond "real science."
"Science fantasy" isn't a real genre. It is what most publishing houses would call "soft science fiction," and it would fall into one of the many subcategories therein ("Wild Wild West" is a classic example of "Steampunk").If it shows little to no regard for building suspension of disbelief and simply offers a fantastical romp (the film Wild Wild West comes to mind), it's what I would call science fantasy.
Some of those sub-genres, by the way, have developed the way they have because of the tendency of the more established "classic" science fiction to become dated. Arthur C. Clarke's "2001: A Space Odyssey" for example, works as pure science fiction when it's written in 1968. If that book had been published in 1999, though, it would be considered "Rocketpunk," presenting a science fiction with a setting about five minutes into the future with technology that definitely doesn't exist and will arguably never exist and yet a realistic story still grows up around it. "Strange Days" is another good example of this.
The reason these are usually soft science fiction stories is because nobody wants to read a long-winded detailed technical explanation of something that obviously cannot exist. You can set a story in the year 2012 about a race of malevolent warrior clones taking over the world, but if you're going to do that your focus is better off being about the sociological implications of cloning in some sort of "playing god/hubris" narrative; a detailed explanation about the workings of the cloning machines probably isn't going to play very well to your readers (unless, of course, you plant to make it a comedy, Douglass Adams style). That's also the reason why time travel stories almost NEVER include anything resembling a plausible explanation for HOW time travel could be possible: because by the time you've finished explaining about Einstein-Rosen bridges and the possibility of retrograde travel in 11-dimensional space and the field equations that would allow for the existence of causality violations, half of your readers have fallen asleep and the other half have skipped to the end of the chapter.
We do if we're reading Rocketpunk.As science fiction ages, its conventions wear to the point that the audience no longer takes them as a given. We no longer accept chemical rocket ships with fins, jet packs, and clumsy metal robots as plausible.
True, but Star Trek doesn't become "steampunk" quite yet because we haven't really dated the time period or the technology, just the stylistic look of it. Buck Rogers isn't really steampunk either for the same reason.Well, guess what? Star Trek is in the same boat. Indeed, the styling cues of the JJ-Prise (the fins, the styling cues from 1950's automobiles, the rocket-looking nacelles) admit the (now) retro-nature of Trek.
OTOH, the 1970s remake of Flash Gordon is arguably the first openly Rocketpunk movie ever made.
Star Trek isn't quite there yet; in 2009, the stylistic nods to TOS were more for continuity and fan pleasure than anything else, but I doubt they will continue to be faithfully followed.
Philosophy and sociology are sciences too. A fictional story that uses technology or alternate history to explore those concepts likewise classifies as science fiction.Again, if it isn't really concerned with science it ain't science fiction.
One really good example: I once read a short story told from the perspective of a slave fleeing from the Confederacy via the underground railroad... in the year 1994. You might hesitate to consider that to be a "science fiction" story, but then you've got to think about, say, "Bread and Circuses" whose premise is basically "What if the Roman Empire had 1960s television technology?"
Last edited: