julieandrews: (Default)
2008-05-08 02:42 pm

Popular Science, Stross, Doctorow, and The Singularity

I was Googling the Interwebs and found this 3-page article in Popular Science. It's a couple of years old, but I found it both interesting and helpful. It discusses the Singularity, science fiction, and the future of science fiction, and the writer talks with Charles Stross and Cory Doctorow. I'm thinking I need to read more Stross.

Is Science Fiction About to Go Blind?

This new brand of science fiction, I realize, like all the best SF before it, is not just about predicting the future or pushing an agenda or even plain old entertaining techno-fun. It is all that, but it’s also about expanding the boundaries of the possible, building far-out worlds and then populating them with characters who bring the big ideas down to Earth. “That’s what you’re supposed to do in science fiction,” Abarbanel tells me. “You make a leap that’s 10 orders of magnitude beyond what we can actually do. If they don’t do that, then we don’t get there.”

Lately I've felt like science fiction had been moving on without me, while I was reading fantasy, space opera, and slightly older sf/f. And I think it was hindering me from fully appreciating (and even actually enjoying) the fiction being published in magazines like Fantasy & Science Fiction.

You know how most science fiction requires that you know how to read science fiction to really get into it? I think I hadn't kept up and was reading with the science fiction reading level of a junior high school student. Which means some of the recent stuff was perfectly accessible to me, but some had aspects that were going over my head. I wasn't getting it, without quite knowing why I wasn't getting it.

But I'm catching up.
julieandrews: (Default)
2008-04-10 05:29 pm

What's Next for Science Fiction?

I've been thinking about this question lately. I ran across this piece discussing that very thing. I didn't actually find anything in here to comment on.. a lack of content I disagreed with. But it's worth a read.

The Time Machine: How sci-fi calculates the future from The Harvard Independent, by Sam Jack.

What next for science fiction? Science fiction, more than any other literary genre, cannot survive without asking itself that question. Science fiction as we think of it today began with Jules Verne in the 1860s (with Journey to the Center of Earth) and was consummated around the turn of the century by H.G. Wells with a remarkable series of novels that each spawned sub-genres unto themselves. Many of Wells’s novels also came to seem prophetic, some even within his own lifetime; The War in the Air, written a scant five years after the first powered airplane flights, predicted a world war with Germany and Japan as the aggressors that would be largely decided by air power.
Read the rest

Now that I think of it, I do have a comment. I only recently heard of this 'singularity' concept, which is apparently credited to Vernor Vinge. Can anyone recommend a good non-Wikipedia essay or discussion of the topic and/or a good original-ish source about it? Any must-reads out there?

And I'm sure I'll have more to say on the What Next thing in posts to come.