New issue of Eaton Journal of Archive Research in Science Fiction is now available at
http://eatonjournal.ucr.edu/
HUBbub is a look at the sometimes unruly (hence the title) conversation of science fiction. It's also a way of putting out information about the SCIENCE FICTION HUB, an on-line resource for sf researchers (and researchers of anything else who may find sf useful) built by the University of Liverpool Library, home of the Science Fiction Foundation Collection, with funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council.
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
ARCHIVES DISPLAY
. . . includes includes awards given to Leslie Flood (nice Cthulhu in the centre!) and a hand-made Valentine's day card from John Wyndham to his partner, Grace Wilson.
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
SCIENCE FICTION
/FANTASY BOOK SALE
Recent donations mean that the Science Fiction Foundation is
holding yet another sale – sf, fantasy, comics, graphic novels – of duplicate
stock.
Surplus copies of classic/contemporary novels, magazines,
and anthologies – sf, fantasy, comics,
graphic novels – are available at knock-down prices: often 50p or
less!
All money raised will support the work of the Science
Fiction Foundation and its research collection administered by the University
of Liverpool Library.
Books available to
view
Monday 4 November – Tues 5 November
from 10:00 a.m. – 4 p.m: Teaching Room, Special Collections and Archives,
Sydney Jones Library
Fan Studies Network Symposium 2013
We are delighted to announce the programme for the FSN2013 symposium, taking place at the University of East Anglia, Norwich, on Saturday 30th November 2013. This will be an excellent opportunity to meet other scholars in the field.
Registration is open until Monday November 18th 2013. You can find out more information and register on the symposium website: http://www.uea.ac.uk/politics-international-media/events/fan-studies-network-symposium
.http://fanstudies.wordpress.com/fan-studies-network-symposium-2013/
Registration is open until Monday November 18th 2013. You can find out more information and register on the symposium website: http://www.uea.ac.uk/politics-international-media/events/fan-studies-network-symposium
.http://fanstudies.wordpress.com/fan-studies-network-symposium-2013/
Wednesday, October 02, 2013
The Lightbox in Woking is exhibiting an alien invasion from 15th October - 19th January:
http://www.thelightbox.org.uk/events1/october2013/15oct19janalieninvasion
On show will be some items from the Science Fiction Foundation Collection.
Deletion, the open access online forum in science fiction studies
http://www.deletionscifi.org/
A new venture in sf studies from Deakin University, Melbourne: (text below taken from their website)
Deletion, the open access online forum in science fiction studies, publishes written think pieces, videos, and artwork in bimonthly “Episodes,” with each Episode featuring between 6 and 8 contributions from scholars, authors, artists, filmmakers, gamers, and creative researchers involved in all aspects of science fiction studies.
Committed to exploring science fiction in all its forms and modes of operation, Deletion invites contributions from those writing about science fiction from a literary, philosophical, artistic, scientific, aural, televisual, games and play, and cinematic context. Deletion also accepts and encourages non-standard submissions such as creative pieces, or think pieces taking the form of 2-3 minute podcasts or video blogs. All readers and contributors are encouraged to join the conversation on Deletion via the comment threads and social media links.
Taking an inter- and cross-disciplinary perspective, Deletion is framed around the key questions; what is science fiction today; what are its social, cultural and political functions; how does it move us and make us think; what forms does it take and what are the relationships within and between those forms?
Deletion is led by scholars from the Science Fiction Research Group at Deakin University, Melbourne, who will form its inner editorial board, alongside an international advisory board comprising of leading scholars in the field.
The first edition of Deletion features invited papers from the leading scholars in science fiction studies addressing the theme “the pleasures of science fiction.”
If you are interested in contributing to Deletion, or have any inquiries, suggestions, or feedback, we would love to hear from you at deletion@deakin.edu.au
A new venture in sf studies from Deakin University, Melbourne: (text below taken from their website)
Deletion, the open access online forum in science fiction studies, publishes written think pieces, videos, and artwork in bimonthly “Episodes,” with each Episode featuring between 6 and 8 contributions from scholars, authors, artists, filmmakers, gamers, and creative researchers involved in all aspects of science fiction studies.
Committed to exploring science fiction in all its forms and modes of operation, Deletion invites contributions from those writing about science fiction from a literary, philosophical, artistic, scientific, aural, televisual, games and play, and cinematic context. Deletion also accepts and encourages non-standard submissions such as creative pieces, or think pieces taking the form of 2-3 minute podcasts or video blogs. All readers and contributors are encouraged to join the conversation on Deletion via the comment threads and social media links.
Taking an inter- and cross-disciplinary perspective, Deletion is framed around the key questions; what is science fiction today; what are its social, cultural and political functions; how does it move us and make us think; what forms does it take and what are the relationships within and between those forms?
Deletion is led by scholars from the Science Fiction Research Group at Deakin University, Melbourne, who will form its inner editorial board, alongside an international advisory board comprising of leading scholars in the field.
The first edition of Deletion features invited papers from the leading scholars in science fiction studies addressing the theme “the pleasures of science fiction.”
If you are interested in contributing to Deletion, or have any inquiries, suggestions, or feedback, we would love to hear from you at deletion@deakin.edu.au
Wednesday, July 17, 2013
PhD Position in European Space History
A fascinating phd possibility for anyone with the interests and language
background
The DFG-funded Emmy Noether research group "The
Future in the Stars: European Astroculture and Extraterrestrial Life in the
Twentieth Century” at the Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut of Freie Universität
Berlin invites applications for a two-year PhD position. Salary grade accords
to E 13 TV-L (50%).
Candidates should have completed their post-graduate
studies in History with a specialization in History of Science, History of
Technology, Cultural History or Art History by the time the appointment begins.
Applicants should be fluent in English. The ability to work in German would be
an asset. Applicants without any knowledge of German are expected, if
appointed, to acquire within one year a sufficient level of proficiency.
The successful candidate will be expected to
conceptualize and compose a doctoral dissertation that is related to European
Space History, c.1927-1975. Furthermore, she/he will be actively engaged in all
activities relevant to the research group including the organization and
realization of workshops and conferences as well as full participation in its
operation and activities.
Applicants should submit a cover letter, a curriculum
vitae, a list of publications, copies of relevant academic certificates, a
research proposal of no more than 3,000 words, and names and contact
information for two academic references. Applications (marked 05-FMI-2013-Geppert)
should be addressed to Dr. Alexander C.T. Geppert, Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut,
Freie Universität Berlin, Koserstrasse 20, D-14195 Berlin, Germany.
Application deadline is 20 August 2013. Interviews
will be held in mid-September.
Women and minority candidates are especially encouraged
to apply. If equally qualified, persons with severe disabilities will be
preferred. Since application files will not be returned to applicants, original
documents must not be included. Electronic submissions will not be considered.
Queries about the position should be directed to Dr.
Alexander Geppert, head of the research group, at alexander.geppert@fu-berlin.de.
Prospective applicants are invited to consult www.geschkult.fu-berlin.de/astrofuturism for
further information.
Tuesday, July 16, 2013
Hélice -- new issue
Vol 2 of the bilingual (English Spanish) sf/f online journal Hélice
http://www.revistahelice.com/revista/Helice_1_vol_II.pdf
is now up. Contents include translations by Leimar Garcia-Siino of the University of Liverpool of two classic sf tales from 19th century Spain: " Teitan the Proud – Tale of Things to Come"
http://www.revistahelice.com/revista/Helice_1_vol_II.pdf
is now up. Contents include translations by Leimar Garcia-Siino of the University of Liverpool of two classic sf tales from 19th century Spain: " Teitan the Proud – Tale of Things to Come"
by Nilo María Fabra
and "Future Time" by Leopoldo Alas ("Clarín"), and an essay on "Time Paradoxes in Science Fiction" by the Romanian sf critic Cornel Robu.
Friday, June 28, 2013
SWORDS, SORCERY, SANDALS AND SPACE
And
Swords, Sorcery, Sandals and Space starts tomorrow, at the Foresight Centre, University of Liverpool.
Swords, Sorcery, Sandals and Space starts tomorrow, at the Foresight Centre, University of Liverpool.
Monday, June 10, 2013
NAOMI MITCHISON BIBLIOGRAPHY
LONDON, UK, 1ST JUNE 2013 – BECCON PUBLICATIONS AND THE SCIENCE FICTION FOUNDATION ANNOUNCE PUBLICATION OF OUTSTANDING AUTHOR NAOMI MITCHISON'S COMPLETE BIBLIOGRAPHY AND NEW SHORT STORY
Roger Robinson: a publisher and bibliographer, the late Violet Williams: for many years Naomi Mitchison’s secretary, and Caroline Mullan: a reader and avid collector of Naomi Mitchison’s work have banded together, in association with Beccon Publications and The Science Fiction Foundation to produce a bibliography of the works of Naomi Mitchison, 1897-1999. Mitchison did many things in her long life: she was the only girl to attend the Dragon School, Oxford, a nurse during the Great War, active lifelong in left and feminist causes, and received a CBE in 1981; but she was, above all, a writer. The bibliography lists over 2,000 items: novels, articles, poetry, reviews, plays, autobiography, speeches, interviews and letters.
The
earliest item listed is Saunes Bairos, the play Mitchison wrote in 1913
while still at school. The latest is the hitherto unpublished short story, On
the Edge, published (with Mitchison’s kind permission) in the bibliography
itself.
Emeritus Professor Isobel Murray, Editor in chief of the Naomi Mitchison Library, in progress from Kennedy and Boyd, said:
“No one has hitherto dared to attempt a Bibliography of
Naomi Mitchison: her work is so various and voluminous that the task has scared
the critics and biographers alike. This new undertaking will be of enormous
value to people working in many disciplines. It is compiled with rigorous
scholarship, and will continue to grow as items are traced and new studies
appear. I welcome it whole-heartedly.”
Mitchison
was the author of over 80 books, with a career extending over 80 years and 5
continents, and encompassing literature, journalism, politics, science,
theatre, poetry, memoir and autobiography. Her novels include The Corn King
and the Spring Queen (1931); non-fiction includes The Moral Basis of
Politics (1938), and Images of Africa (1980). Her autobiographical
memoir, Mucking Around: Five Continents over Fifty Years, was published
in 1981. Mitchison’s stories, articles and letters appeared in publications as
diverse as The Times and The Guardian, The New Humanist and Trends in
Biochemical Sciences, The Countryman and The Illustrated Weekly of India.
Caroline Mullan said:
Caroline Mullan said:
"We hope this comprehensive bibliography of her works
will be valuable to scholars of literature, and of the history of the 20th
Century."
The bibliography is a work in progress, and its authors intend to maintain and extend it over the coming years. It is available for use on the Beccon Publications website at: www.beccon.org
For
more information about the Bibliography and its authors, please visit www.beccon.org or contact
Roger Robinson at 01708 342304.
***
Notes to the Editor:
1. Naomi
May Margaret Mitchison, CBE (née Haldane; 1 November 1897 – 11 January
1999) was a Scottish writer. She was appointed CBE (Commander of the Order of
the British Empire) in 1981. Naomi Mitchison’s science fiction includes the
ground-breaking novel, Memoirs of a Spacewoman, published by Gollancz in
1962, as well as other novels and short stories.
2. The
Science Fiction Foundation is a registered charity. The aim of the Science
Fiction Foundation is to promote science fiction, and bring together those who
read, write, study, teach, research or archive science fiction in Britain and
the rest of the world. Contact the Science Fiction Foundation via its website: www.sf-foundation.org or by emailing
Secretary Shana Worthen at secretary@sf-foundation.org.
3. Beccon
Publications is a British small-press publisher specialising in science
fiction, and does not produce "print-on-demand" editions, preferring
to print one or two "real" books each year. The first Beccon publication
- a bibliography of Barrington J Bayley - was issued in August 1981. Since then
more than 50 booklets and books have been produced, including a number of
titles nominated for prestigious Hugo and BSFA Awards.
Monday, May 20, 2013
The Midwich Dayout at Letchmore Heath on Sunday 19th May celebrating Village of the Damned (where many of the film's exterior scenes were shot) was a good, er, day out. Among the guests were Barbara Shelley, who played Anthea Zellaby in the film, and Martin Stephens, Teri Scoble, Lesley Scoble, and Peter Preidel, who were among the blond, staring-eyed "cuckoo" children.
My talk about Village of the Damned, and John Wyndham's The Midwich Cuckoos and its unfinished "sequel" Midwich Main was well received. A highlight of the day was a guided tour around Letchmore Heath, seeing buildings and locations which featured in the film.
My talk about Village of the Damned, and John Wyndham's The Midwich Cuckoos and its unfinished "sequel" Midwich Main was well received. A highlight of the day was a guided tour around Letchmore Heath, seeing buildings and locations which featured in the film.
![]() |
Journalist Darrel Buxton (far left) interviewing (l-r) Lesley Scoble, Barbara Shelley, and Peter Preidel. |
![]() |
Four of the Midwich "Cuckoos": l-r Martin Stephens, Teri Scoble, Lesley Scoble, Peter Preidel. |
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Stapledon's STAR MAKER on Radio 4
Moshsin Hamid, author of The Reluctant Fundamentalist and How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia, chose Wirral-born Olaf Stapledon’s Star Maker to talk about on BBC Radio 4’s Front Row on Wednesday 24th April as part of its "Cultural Exchange series" . Front Row's website illustrates the discussion with a photograph of Stapledon and this image of Stapledon's "Timeline" showing the billions of years covered by the book. Images were supplied by Special Collections and Archives from the Olaf Stapledon Archive.
Monday, April 15, 2013
ALEX COX TO DIRECT BILL, THE GALACTIC HERO?
Alex Cox, director of
REPO MAN, SID AND NANCY, and the extraordinary sf version of THE REVENGER'S
TRAGEDY has launched a Kickstarter appeal to raise funds (US$ 100,000)
for the film of Harry Harrison's BILL THE GALACTIC HERO
to be made by students at the University of Colorado film studies programme.
Alex was working on a script for the film with Harry Harrison before Harry's
death. Alex Cox will direct the film.
If anyone wants to become a media "angel" this looks like a worthy project to support.
Details are on http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/alexcoxfilms/alex-cox-directs-bill-the-galactic-hero
If anyone wants to become a media "angel" this looks like a worthy project to support.
Details are on http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/alexcoxfilms/alex-cox-directs-bill-the-galactic-hero
Midwich Dayout
MIDWICH DAYOUT is a one-day event celebrating the 1960 film "THE VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED" based on the novel by John Wyndham, THE MIDWICH CUCKOOS (1957).
Appearing will be several members of the original cast and crew of the film including BARBARA SHELLEY (Anthea Zellaby) and MARTIN STEPHENS (David). There will be a talk on VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED and Wyndham's abandoned "sequel" MIDWICH MAIN by Andy Sawyer of the University of Liverpool. The "Dayout" will take place on Sunday, 19th May in LETCHMORE HEATH, Hertfordshire - the village where much of the location shooting was done for the film. Tickets are £25.00. More details on hthttp://www.midwich-village.co.uk/index.html
Thursday, April 11, 2013
The Eaton Journal of Archival Research in Science Fiction
The first issue, containing pieces by Farah Mendlesohn, Rob Latham, Lisa Yasek, Veronica Hollinger, Brian Attebery and Chris Pak is now online at http://eatonjournal.ucr.edu/.
"The Eaton Journal of Archival Research in Science Fiction is a peer-reviewed, open-access, online journal hosted by the University of California at Riverside, affiliated with the Eaton Collection of Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror, and Utopian Studies. The journal is run by graduate student editors, with scholarly review provided by an interdisciplinary executive board made up of SF scholars, research librarians, and archivists. This diverse editorial pool reflects the Journal’s mission of fostering an interdisciplinary conversation, bringing literary scholars together with the archivists whose work assembles, curates, and makes meaning within archives. Putting these disciplinary voices into discussion within the pages of the journal fosters innovative research and incisive scholarship in the field of SF studies." The Eaton Journal of Archival Research in Science Fiction is edited by Jeff Hicks and Josh Pearson.
"The Eaton Journal of Archival Research in Science Fiction is a peer-reviewed, open-access, online journal hosted by the University of California at Riverside, affiliated with the Eaton Collection of Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror, and Utopian Studies. The journal is run by graduate student editors, with scholarly review provided by an interdisciplinary executive board made up of SF scholars, research librarians, and archivists. This diverse editorial pool reflects the Journal’s mission of fostering an interdisciplinary conversation, bringing literary scholars together with the archivists whose work assembles, curates, and makes meaning within archives. Putting these disciplinary voices into discussion within the pages of the journal fosters innovative research and incisive scholarship in the field of SF studies." The Eaton Journal of Archival Research in Science Fiction is edited by Jeff Hicks and Josh Pearson.
Wednesday, March 06, 2013
A new phd possibility:
Interdisciplinary Scholarship
Deadline April 18th 2013
Topic: The Human Face in Contemporary Anglo-American Culture.
Principal Supervisor(s): Name: Adam Piette (Professor of Modern Literature) and Fabienne Collignon (Lecturer in American Literature)
Co-supervisors: Name: Paul Hatton (Professor of Bioengineering & Health Technologies), School of Clinical Dentistry
This project is directed at exploring the portrayal of the human face in Anglo-American culture, with a specific focus directed at science fiction film and fiction from H.G. Wells on to the present day. Of particular interest are man-machine amalgamations; the editors of the Cyborg Handbook (1995) identify a wide range of cyborg technologies as, for example, restorative, normalizing, reconfiguring, enhancing, degrading. Rather than focus on the whole (cybernetic) organism, what this project seeks to do is to home in on the face as locus of expression and affect, and to trace its modifications at hand of such cybernetic technologies, often concerned with facial sensory extensions like eye enhancements; the development of aural capabilities. The project is, however, further interested in exploring related technologies—genetic engineering, cross-species experimentation, plastic surgery, grafting and implants, teeth interventions—in order to address the politics of these processes. In their search for body utopia, the development of man into superman, these procedures are haunted by the spectres of fascism: what biopower is at work in bio-engineering? A further premise of the study is the erasure of distinctions between science fiction and the present moment: contemporary culture is science fiction. Hence any investigation into the human face as impact zone of techno-fantasies will be alert to the overlapping narratives of perfection and plasticity between science, science fiction/horror, and utopia. By investigating the portrayal of the human face in contemporary film and media, this also explores the societal use of medical, dental, and cosmetic interventions in the development of a “perfect” face, demonstrating some of the more unusual or worrying aspects of the human obsession with beauty (and at the same time relating this to what the media portrays as beautiful and— more challenging—how and why the current model was arrived at and where it is going). There is a potential translational aspect of this research in the areas of sales & marketing, cosmetics, and the media industries, providing future opportunities for knowledge exchange, collaboration and consultancy. This project is interested in exploring the power relations at work in the portrayal of the technologized and plastic human face in contemporary Anglo-American culture. What cultural codes exist in the fluid ‘text’ of the face in the 20th and 21st Centuries and how are they challenged in or perpetuated by contemporary culture? A considerable amount of work has been done on the cyborg body, but a study remains to be conducted to focus exclusively on facial technologies of enhancement and modification. In the process, it will investigate the cultural norms that dictate ‘beauty’, the desire for self-modification through technology, and the mechanisms expected to be constitutive of an elusive ideal: the ‘perfect’ face.
Expressions of interest are welcome from candidates from a variety of disciplines – we are looking for enthusiastic, lively and committed students with projects focussing on any of the aspects covered in the above. If you have any queries about your project idea or suitability, please contact Fabienne Collignon (f.collignon@sheffield.ac.uk).
How to apply
Interdisciplinary Scholarships provide an annual bursary of c. £13,590, Home/EU tuition fees and a contribution to research expenses. application.
Applicants should apply through the University's online application system. Applications should contain a research proposal that fits with the above project as well as a 500 word statement as to why you are interested in undertaking a PhD in this area.
Any queries about this Scholarship please contact Harriet Godfrey (h.godfrey@sheffield.ac.uk)
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
The Life and Work of Jane Webb Loudon
Women & Science in the Nineteenth-Century: Science Fiction and Science Education
Leeds Trinity University College 27th-28th June 2011
Call for Papers
Jane Webb Loudon (1807-1858) is a neglected figure of interest to a range of research areas including women’s professional writing, the promotion of science and women’s education and speculative fiction. She is best known for The Mummy! A Tale of the Twenty-Second Century (1827) and Gardening for Ladies (1840). The conference intends to explore the life, work and example of Jane Webb Loudon in the context of women and science in the nineteenth century. It therefore seeks papers from various disciplinary perspectives on fictional and non-fictional contributions by women to the formation of popular scientific awareness during the nineteenth century.
We welcome proposals for contributions on the following topics:
Women’s Science Fiction Victorian Science Fiction Women & Scientific Research
Popular Science Jane Webb Loudon’s Circle Women’s Magazines
Visualising Social Change Botany and Horticulture Children’s Education
Women’s positions and voices within late Victorian science fiction 1850-1910
Nineteenth-century speculative writing Science & Social Reform
Scientific Writing & the Periodical Press Class & Entry to the Professions
Women’s Education and Science in Popular Fiction Women’s Gardening
Vivisection Represented in Women’s Writing Gender debates in Science Fiction
Keynote speakers, Matthew Beaumont, Alan Rauch, Andy Sawyer, Ann B. Shteir
First Call for Papers. Please send 500 word abstracts to arpfmail@yahoo.co.uk with the subject line Women and Science in the Nineteenth Century by August 1st 2010
Further details available at www.arpf.org.uk Follow us on www.twitter.com/arpfnews
Women & Science in the Nineteenth-Century: Science Fiction and Science Education
Leeds Trinity University College 27th-28th June 2011
Call for Papers
Jane Webb Loudon (1807-1858) is a neglected figure of interest to a range of research areas including women’s professional writing, the promotion of science and women’s education and speculative fiction. She is best known for The Mummy! A Tale of the Twenty-Second Century (1827) and Gardening for Ladies (1840). The conference intends to explore the life, work and example of Jane Webb Loudon in the context of women and science in the nineteenth century. It therefore seeks papers from various disciplinary perspectives on fictional and non-fictional contributions by women to the formation of popular scientific awareness during the nineteenth century.
We welcome proposals for contributions on the following topics:
Women’s Science Fiction Victorian Science Fiction Women & Scientific Research
Popular Science Jane Webb Loudon’s Circle Women’s Magazines
Visualising Social Change Botany and Horticulture Children’s Education
Women’s positions and voices within late Victorian science fiction 1850-1910
Nineteenth-century speculative writing Science & Social Reform
Scientific Writing & the Periodical Press Class & Entry to the Professions
Women’s Education and Science in Popular Fiction Women’s Gardening
Vivisection Represented in Women’s Writing Gender debates in Science Fiction
Keynote speakers, Matthew Beaumont, Alan Rauch, Andy Sawyer, Ann B. Shteir
First Call for Papers. Please send 500 word abstracts to arpfmail@yahoo.co.uk with the subject line Women and Science in the Nineteenth Century by August 1st 2010
Further details available at www.arpf.org.uk Follow us on www.twitter.com/arpfnews
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Call for Papers: ‘Surrealism, Science Fiction, and Comic Books’
Call for Papers: ‘Surrealism, Science Fiction, and Comic Books’
In his 1976 essay ‘Science Fiction and Allied Literature,’ David Ketterer wrote ‘it is rather surprising that the considerable affinity which exists between Surrealism and SF has not attracted more attention.’ This observation was repeated in 1997 by Roger Bozzetto and Arthur B. Evans, who lamented that the relations between Surrealism and science fiction ‘continue to be largely unexplored in SF scholarship,’ and that ‘there currently exists no in-depth study of SF and Surrealism.’ The points of contact and areas of overlap, along with the influences, differences, and antagonisms that lie between Surrealism, science fiction, and the related literature of the comic book will be explored in this conference to be held 22 January 2011 at The Courtauld Institute of Art, London.
Such observations take on extra force when we consider Surrealism’s historical context, along with its literary and pictorial culture. Emerging in France between the two world wars, it was well positioned to receive the writings of Jules Verne and H. G. Wells that initiated and defined the genre boundaries of early science fiction, along with the popularisation of the fourth dimension and the advent of the Theory of Relativity that such literature drew upon, whilst the writings of Alfred Jarry, Franz Kafka, and Raymond Roussel gave them a related comic, absurd, or fantastic perspective on the machine and technology. Indeed, Roussel’s boundless admiration for Verne was equalled by the similar veneration felt for Roussel by Marcel Duchamp and Roberto Matta, expressed in their art between 1912 and the 1940s. Furthermore, one of the most important figures in early French SF (and now almost forgotten), Jacques Spitz, was close to the Surrealists in the 1930s, and his books of the interwar years show a marked Surrealist tendency. In the 1940s, Matta’s work was affected more specifically by the worlds described in science fiction and also by comic books, which were a significant discovery for André Breton and the Surrealists in New York. Important to René Magritte’s art in the 1940s, comic books were also a key popular form for postwar Surrealism in Europe and America.
Because barely any scholarship exists on how far the art and writings of Surrealists in the forties and since were affected by SF and comic books, it is expected that postwar art and writings will form a significant strand of this conference (for instance, the writings of Malcolm de Chazal were described by their English translator as ‘science fictions’), as will the investigation of how the project to expand reality proposed by Surrealism in its imagery and poetry was extended by important SF writers such as Stanislaw Lem and J.G. Ballard, as well as for related novelists like Jorge Luis Borges, Alan Burns, and Thomas Pynchon.
Potential areas of exploration are:
• Surrealism, SF, and the imagery of spiritualism
• The comic book as a subversive accomplice of Surrealism
• Surrealism, physics, and fiction
• The spaces of Surrealist painting and the SF imagination
• Legacies of Surrealism in contemporary comic books
• The fourth dimension in Surrealism, modernism, and SF
• Surrealist and SF geographies
• The Gothic imagination in Surrealism, SF, and comics
• Futurity in Surrealism and SF
• SF and Surrealism in the postmodern novel
Paper proposals of about 250 words should be sent to gavin.parkinson@courtauld.ac.uk
The Courtauld Institute of Art, London, 22 January 2011
In his 1976 essay ‘Science Fiction and Allied Literature,’ David Ketterer wrote ‘it is rather surprising that the considerable affinity which exists between Surrealism and SF has not attracted more attention.’ This observation was repeated in 1997 by Roger Bozzetto and Arthur B. Evans, who lamented that the relations between Surrealism and science fiction ‘continue to be largely unexplored in SF scholarship,’ and that ‘there currently exists no in-depth study of SF and Surrealism.’ The points of contact and areas of overlap, along with the influences, differences, and antagonisms that lie between Surrealism, science fiction, and the related literature of the comic book will be explored in this conference to be held 22 January 2011 at The Courtauld Institute of Art, London.
Such observations take on extra force when we consider Surrealism’s historical context, along with its literary and pictorial culture. Emerging in France between the two world wars, it was well positioned to receive the writings of Jules Verne and H. G. Wells that initiated and defined the genre boundaries of early science fiction, along with the popularisation of the fourth dimension and the advent of the Theory of Relativity that such literature drew upon, whilst the writings of Alfred Jarry, Franz Kafka, and Raymond Roussel gave them a related comic, absurd, or fantastic perspective on the machine and technology. Indeed, Roussel’s boundless admiration for Verne was equalled by the similar veneration felt for Roussel by Marcel Duchamp and Roberto Matta, expressed in their art between 1912 and the 1940s. Furthermore, one of the most important figures in early French SF (and now almost forgotten), Jacques Spitz, was close to the Surrealists in the 1930s, and his books of the interwar years show a marked Surrealist tendency. In the 1940s, Matta’s work was affected more specifically by the worlds described in science fiction and also by comic books, which were a significant discovery for André Breton and the Surrealists in New York. Important to René Magritte’s art in the 1940s, comic books were also a key popular form for postwar Surrealism in Europe and America.
Because barely any scholarship exists on how far the art and writings of Surrealists in the forties and since were affected by SF and comic books, it is expected that postwar art and writings will form a significant strand of this conference (for instance, the writings of Malcolm de Chazal were described by their English translator as ‘science fictions’), as will the investigation of how the project to expand reality proposed by Surrealism in its imagery and poetry was extended by important SF writers such as Stanislaw Lem and J.G. Ballard, as well as for related novelists like Jorge Luis Borges, Alan Burns, and Thomas Pynchon.
Potential areas of exploration are:
• Surrealism, SF, and the imagery of spiritualism
• The comic book as a subversive accomplice of Surrealism
• Surrealism, physics, and fiction
• The spaces of Surrealist painting and the SF imagination
• Legacies of Surrealism in contemporary comic books
• The fourth dimension in Surrealism, modernism, and SF
• Surrealist and SF geographies
• The Gothic imagination in Surrealism, SF, and comics
• Futurity in Surrealism and SF
• SF and Surrealism in the postmodern novel
Paper proposals of about 250 words should be sent to gavin.parkinson@courtauld.ac.uk
The Courtauld Institute of Art, London, 22 January 2011
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Corrections/Expansions to Introduction to Plan For Chaos
Corrections and some expansions (particularly a revised endnote 22) now made to David Ketterer's introduction to Plan For Chaos.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
More John Wyndham News
There's a new John Wyndham fan page on http://www.wyndhamweb.com/, which mentions Plan for Chaos . Reviews of the new Penguin edition have appeared in the Sunday Times , the Daily Telegraph , and the Independent on Sunday.
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