Saturday, October 12, 2019
The Writing Styles Of 2 Prominent British Science Fiction Authors :: essays research papers
 The Writing Styles of 2 Prominent British Science Fiction Authors    "Science fiction is one of the more secluded parade grounds where private  fantasy and public event meet. They call it entertainment". (Aldiss Billion 1)  This quote is interpreted to mean that, in the genre of science fiction there is  a fusion of fantasy and reality. It is this combination of two opposites that  produces the novel categorized today as science fiction. There is one aspect of  science fiction that separates it from any other genre. Science fiction can be  written as fantasy one day, and read as scientific fact the next. Jules Verne  has written about man setting foot on the moon. When read by its original  readers the idea of space travel was not a reality. It is now common knowledge  that man has walked on the moon, and when this novel is read today no longer is  space travel considered to be imaginary. Skillful science fiction novelists  brilliantly blend fantasy with reality, composing a very fine line between the  two perceptions. When reading, one sometimes does not even realize when the  author makes the transition from a plausible concept to a ludicrous one.  Science fiction is a relatively new term. Novels were first categorized this  way towards the close of the 1920's. This word was first utilized in short  stories that appeared in the pulp magazines, of the era. The phrase "science  fiction" was considered an enhancement of the term scientifiction. However  several British novels were categorized as scientific romances before the 1920's.  (Aldiss Trillion 27) Before Frankenstein the only forms of science fiction were  "the plays of Aristophanes or some Myrenaean fragment concerning the flight to  the sun on a goose's back." (Aldiss Billion 2) In these fantasies there is no  blend of reality and fantasy, it is pure fantasy. There is no one story that  is accepted to be the first science fiction tale. Science fiction as perceived  today originated with Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. (Aldiss Trillion 18)       Mary Shelley was the wife of the famous British poet, Percy Bysshe  Shelley and daughter of Mary Wollenstonecraft. She was born in 1797 and her  mother died soon after birth. Mary Wollenstonecraft married her husband at the  age of fifteen. She produced her most famous novel entitled Frankenstein at the  age of nineteen. It was published in 1818. (Ash 178)       The origin of the novel came to Shelley in a dream, in which she says  she saw "the hideous phantasm of a man stretched out, and then, on the working  of some powerful engine, show signs of life, and stir with an uneasy half vital    					    
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