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History of the Future

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History of the Future 7: Philip K. Dick and the New Wave The New Wave in SF Originates in Britain, mid-1960s More literary & experimental approach Darker and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: History of the Future


1
History of the Future
  • 7 Philip K. Dick and the New Wave

2
The New Wave in SF
  • Originates in Britain, mid-1960s
  • More literary experimental approach
  • Darker and more pessimistic
  • Sex, drugs, pop-culture
  • New Worlds magazine
  • JG Ballard, Brian Aldiss, Michael Moorcock
  • Thomas M. Disch, Samuel R. Delaney from US
  • Leaves SF with more attitude style

3
Dangerous Visions
  • US Anthology
  • Published 1967
  • Edited by Harlan Ellison
  • Launch of New Wave in US
  • Hipper style, more sex, more religion
  • Revolutionary claims just hype
  • Writers like Ellison, Roger Zelazny start
    scooping up SF awards

4
SF Meets Literature
  • New established authors resent limits of genre
  • Is it really the literature of ideas?
  • Typical New Wave author
  • Read science fiction in their youth
  • Went to university and studied literature
  • Want to write SF that is real literature
  • Produces some excellent work
  • Most languishes between SF and literary
    communities
  • Push peaks in the 1970s
  • Science fiction first appears on college curricula

5
SF The Future
  • SF authors shift away from technological
    extrapolation
  • Many work more with myth and fable
  • Recycle genre elements to different end
  • More interested in character, style
  • Explore science technology through allegory
  • Connection is weakening
  • Futuristic imagery and ideas spreading
  • Space program futurology usurp SF territory
  • Vonnegut, etc. achieving fame in mainstream

6
J. G. Ballard
  • Figurehead of New Wave in Britain
  • Writer of Inner Space
  • Grew up in WWII concentration camp
  • Fascinated by medical pathology
  • Disliked plot, characterization
  • Stories feature
  • The end of the world, everyone dazed obsessed
  • Breakdown of civilization
  • American dreamscapes
  • Ruins of the space program
  • Very weird alienated sex

7
Ursula K. LeGuin
  • Came to prominence in late 1960s
  • Fixture of SF college curricula
  • Strong moral feminist element
  • The Left Hand of Darkness (1969)
  • Cold war allegory hermaphrodite society
  • The Dispossessed (1974)
  • An ambiguous anarchist utopia
  • Thoughtful, serious

8
Other New Wave Authors
  • Roger Zelazny
  • Stylish writing sex, slang, drugs
  • Mythology, fable, interior of minds
  • Samuel R. Delaney
  • Dazzling, allegorical space quests in 60s
  • Gay, black, bohemian, fan of science fiction
  • Becomes post-modern academic in 70s
  • Thomas M. Disch
  • Elegant, bleak novels in 60s and 70s
  • 334 (1972) deals with near future urban life
  • Achieves broader renown as poet, critic

9
Impact of the New Wave
  • As a result of this literary drive
  • Sex obscenity appears in the future
  • Entropy gets fashionable
  • People start name-dropping William Burroughs
  • Popular culture makes its way into SF
  • Loosens restraints on SF writers in general
  • Including Dick, Pohl whose books you read

10
Philip K. Dick
  • Not primarily identified as New Wave
  • Writing long before that
  • But did have a story in Dangerous Visions
  • Very influential on New Wave (and on later
    cyberpunk)
  • Writing from mid-50s to early-80s
  • About 50 novels written (not all published)
  • Best SF novels from 1960-1970
  • Never famous or best selling

11
His Life
  • Troubled life. Influenced his work
  • Trouble with authority.
  • Drops out of college
  • Only jobs in record store and as DJ
  • Many wives. Liked unstable, dark haired young
    women.
  • Drug problems, speed (amphetamine addict)
  • Investigated by FBI
  • Constant financial problems
  • Mentally unstable
  • Fascinated by madness
  • Had revelatory experience in 1972

12
Unique Reading Experience
  • Mixture of ordinary and fantastical
  • Troubled, sympathetic people
  • All heroes are struggling small-timers
  • Weird events
  • Apocalyptic, existential crises
  • Philosophical yet trashy
  • Funny
  • Dark humor, human sympathy

13
The Future
  • Dicks work clearly reflects time place
  • Many unpublished mainsteam 50s novels
  • SF brings freedom from censorship?
  • Very little realistic science/technology
  • Creates twisted versions of existing world
  • Uses SF clichés in new ways

14
Recurring Themes
  • Real or Fake?
  • often ambiguous
  • wisdom, authenticity in strange places
  • Collapsing realities
  • Hidden battle of good and evil
  • Mental Illness
  • Human or Android?
  • Nuclear war
  • Drugs
  • Sometimes expose reality

15
The Man in the High Castle
  • Alternate history Nazis win war
  • Only Hugo award
  • More carefully written than most
  • Commercial failure
  • Spurs redoubled output

16
Periods (I)
  • Early novels (1950s)
  • Including Time Out of Joint (1959)
  • Mainstream novels (late 1950s), unpublished
  • Flood of SF novels in 1960s
  • Uneven quality, highlights are
  • Martian-Time Slip (1964)
  • The Man in the High Castle (1961)
  • Dr Bloodmoney (1965)
  • The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch (1965)
  • Now Wait for Last Year (1966)
  • Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep (Blade
    Runner) (1968)
  • Ubik (written 1969)

17
Periods (II)
  • 1960s novels marked by
  • Drugs
  • Nuclear war
  • Increasingly ambiguous realities
  • 1970s
  • Fewer novels
  • Increasingly theological tone
  • Several based on own revelations

18
Periods (III)
  • Dick dies (1982), becomes famous
  • Blade Runner film appears
  • Academic reputation grows
  • Unpublished books appear
  • Viewed as key SF author
  • Attractive to Marxists, cultural studies
  • Cult following
  • Postmodern blend of high and low culture

19
Summary late 60s, early 70s
  • Deepening splintering of SF
  • Beginnings of sub-genre of literary SF
  • Much commercial work goes on as before
  • though much altered.
  • Academic favorites are not popular favorites
  • Role of future becomes more problematic
  • Used more consciously as mirror of present
  • Idea of progress is challenged
  • Symbols of future spread beyond SF
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