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Moderne Meister der Science-Fiction

Diese Reihe befasst sich mit den Werken visionärer Autoren, die die Grenzen der Science-Fiction geprägt und erweitert haben. Jeder Band konzentriert sich auf einen einzelnen Meister und untersucht dessen einzigartige Beiträge und bleibenden Einfluss auf das Genre. Entdecken Sie aufschlussreiche Analysen ihrer kreativen Prozesse, thematischen Innovationen und der imaginären Welten, die sie geschaffen haben. Dies ist unerlässlich für jeden, der die Entwicklung der modernen Science-Fiction verstehen möchte.

Greg Egan
William Gibson
Ray Bradbury
Alfred Bester
Arthur C. Clarke
Octavia E. Butler

Empfohlene Lesereihenfolge

  • Octavia E. Butler

    • 248 Seiten
    • 9 Lesestunden

    I began writing about power because I had so little, Octavia E. Butler once said. Butler's life as an African American woman--an alien in American society and among science fiction writers--informed the powerful works that earned her an ardent readership and acclaim both inside and outside science fiction. Gerry Canavan offers a critical and holistic consideration of Butler's career. Drawing on Butler's personal papers, Canavan tracks the false starts, abandoned drafts, tireless rewrites, and real-life obstacles that fed Butler's frustrations and launched her triumphs. Canavan departs from other studies to approach Butler first and foremost as a science fiction writer working within, responding to, and reacting against the genre's particular canon. The result is an illuminating study of how an essential SF figure shaped themes, unconventional ideas, and an unflagging creative urge into brilliant works of fiction.

    Octavia E. Butler
  • Already renowned for his science fiction and scientific nonfiction, Arthur C. Clarke became the world's most famous science fiction writer after the success of 2001: A Space Odyssey. He then produced novels like Rendezvous with Rama and The Fountains of Paradise that many regard as his finest works. Gary Westfahl closely examines Clarke's remarkable career, ranging from his forgotten juvenilia to the passages he completed for a final novel, The Last Theorem. As Westfahl explains, Clarke's science fiction offered original perspectives on subjects like new inventions, space travel, humanity's destiny, alien encounters, the undersea world, and religion. While not inclined to mysticism, Clarke necessarily employed mystical language to describe the fantastic achievements of advanced aliens and future humans. Westfahl also contradicts the common perception that Clarke's characters were bland and underdeveloped, arguing that these reticent, solitary individuals, who avoid conventional relationships, represent his most significant prediction of the future, as they embody the increasingly common lifestyle of people in the twenty-first century.

    Arthur C. Clarke
  • Alfred Bester

    • 216 Seiten
    • 8 Lesestunden

    Alfred Bester's classic short stories and the canonical novel The Stars My Destination made him a science fiction legend. Fans and scholars praise him as a genre-bending pioneer and cyberpunk forefather. Writers like Neil Gaiman and William Gibson celebrate his prophetic vision and stylistic innovations. Jad Smith traces the career of the unlikeliest of SF icons. Winner of the first Hugo Award for The Demolished Man , Bester also worked in comics, radio, and TV, and his intermittent SF writing led some critics to brand him a dabbler. In the 1960s, however, New Wave writers championed his work, and his reputation grew. Smith follows Bester's journey from consummate outsider to an artist venerated for foundational works that influenced the New Wave and cyberpunk revolutions. He also explores the little-known roots of a wayward journey fueled by curiosity, disappointment with the SF mainstream, and an artist's determination to go his own way.

    Alfred Bester
  • Ray Bradbury

    • 222 Seiten
    • 8 Lesestunden
    3,5(6)Abgeben

    As much as any individual, Ray Bradbury brought science fiction's ideas into the mainstream. Yet he transcended the genre in both form and popularity, using its trappings to explore timely social concerns and the kaleidoscope of human experience while in the process becoming one of America's most beloved authors. David Seed follows Bradbury's long career from the early short story masterpieces through his work in a wide variety of broadcast and film genres to the influential cultural commentary he spread via essays, speeches, and interviews. Mining Bradbury's classics and hard-to-find archival, literary, and cultural materials, Seed analyzes how the author's views on technology, authoritarianism, and censorship affected his art; how his Midwest of dream and dread brought his work to life; and the ways film and television influenced his creative process and visually-oriented prose style. The result is a passionate statement on Bradbury's status as an essential literary writer deserving of a place in the cultural history of his time.

    Ray Bradbury
  • William Gibson

    • 224 Seiten
    • 8 Lesestunden
    3,5(21)Abgeben

    Gary Westfahl, an adjunct professor at the University of La Verne, has made significant contributions to the field of science fiction through his extensive publications. Notable works include the comprehensive three-volume Greenwood Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy, as well as the acclaimed Science Fiction Quotations, which received a Hugo Award nomination. His expertise and scholarly approach enrich the understanding of the genre.

    William Gibson
  • Greg Egan

    • 208 Seiten
    • 8 Lesestunden

    Greg Egan (1961- ) publishes works that challenge readers with rigorous, deeply-informed scientific speculation. This book includes a rare interview with the famously press-shy Egan covering his works, themes, intellectual interests, and thought processes.

    Greg Egan
  • Lois McMaster Bujold

    • 224 Seiten
    • 8 Lesestunden
    4,2(25)Abgeben

    Edward James, an Emeritus Professor of Medieval History at University College Dublin, has made significant contributions to the field of science fiction. He co-edited the acclaimed Cambridge Companion to Science Fiction, which won a Hugo Award, and authored Science Fiction in the Twentieth Century, showcasing his expertise and deep understanding of the genre's evolution and impact.

    Lois McMaster Bujold
  • J. G. Ballard

    • 214 Seiten
    • 8 Lesestunden
    4,2(12)Abgeben

    Prophetic short stories and apocalyptic novels like The Crystal World made J. G. Ballard a foundational figure in the British New Wave. Rejecting the science fiction of rockets and aliens, he explored an inner space of humanity informed by psychiatry and biology and shaped by Surrealism. Later in his career, Ballard's combustible plots and violent imagery spurred controversy--even legal action--while his autobiographical 1984 war novel Empire of the Sun brought him fame. D. Harlan Wilson offers the first career-spanning analysis of an author who helped steer SF in new, if startling, directions. Here was a writer committed to moral ambiguity, one who drowned the world and erected a London high-rise doomed to descend into savagery--and coolly picked apart the characters trapped within each story. Wilson also examines Ballard's methods, his influence on cyberpunk, and the ways his fiction operates within the sphere of our larger culture and within SF itself.

    J. G. Ballard
  • Iain M. Banks

    • 208 Seiten
    • 8 Lesestunden

    The 1987 publication of Iain M. Banks's Consider Phlebas helped trigger the British renaissance of radical hard science fiction and influenced a generation of New Space Opera masters. The thirteen SF novels that followed inspired an avid fandom and intense intellectual engagement while Banks's mainstream books vaulted him to the top of the Scottish literary scene. Paul Kincaid has written the first study of Iain M. Banks to explore the confluence of his SF and literary techniques and sensibilities. As Kincaid shows, the two powerful aspects of Banks's work flowed into each other, blurring a line that critics too often treat as clear-cut. Banks's gift for black humor and a honed skepticism regarding politics and religion found expression even as he orchestrated the vast, galaxy-spanning vistas in his novels of the Culture. In examining Banks's entire SF oeuvre, Kincaid unlocks the set of ideas Banks drew upon, ideas that spoke to an unusually varied readership that praised him as a visionary and reveled in the distinctive character of his works. Entertaining and broad in scope, Iain M. Banks offers new insights on one of the most admired figures in contemporary science fiction.

    Iain M. Banks