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- From: zebee@wattle.itd.adelaide.edu.au (Zebee Johnstone)
- Newsgroups: aus.sf
- Subject: Re: Political Science Fiction
- Date: 12 Jan 93 04:54:07 GMT
- Organization: The University of Adelaide
- Lines: 37
- Message-ID: <zebee.726814447@wattle.itd.adelaide.edu.au>
- References: <dyfl.726473285@phobos> <mwp.726711440@iconix.oz.au>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: wattle.itd.adelaide.edu.au
-
- mwp@iconix.oz.au (Michael Paddon) writes:
-
-
- >SF has had a long history of being involved with political debate. To name
- >a few early works by way of example:
-
- >_The Divine Comedy_, Dante
- >_Utopia_, Thomas More
- >_Brave New World_, Aldous Huxley
- >_1984_, George Orwell
-
- Not sure about Dante, as he is generally only known for the Comedy, but
- the others were authors/philosophers who used SF to make a point.
-
- More was a famous statesman and author. Huxley was a brilliant essayist,
- journalist and man of letters from an equally brilliant family.
-
- Orwell was another journo and essayist.
-
- Do you suppose that any SF book without such credentials will ever be as
- influential as 1984 and Brave New World?
-
- And I'm not even sure how influential they are either. 1984 has made it
- into the language and culture (Big Brother plus the whole concept of
- 1984), but BNW is hardly read or discussed now, and I don;t think any of
- its concepts are in the mass consciousness.
-
- And in an era where books and literature are losing their "clout", will
- "any" book ever be that influential? Or will only TV shows (Star Trek
- for example) or movies (Star Wars and the Force) have an impact?
-
-
- --
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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