Jupiter's Ghost: Next Generation Science Fiction
By (Author) Gregory Zentz
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
23rd May 1991
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Science: general issues
809.3
Hardback
192
The why's and what-if's of scientific inquiry constitute the core of science fiction, the purpose of which is to further explore these questions from every imaginable angle. Gregory L. Zentz affirms this connection between science and fiction, showing how integtral a grasp of the theoretical and practical sciences is to an understanding of science fiction. Zentz provides a holistic, rather than a literary or a sociological analysis, thereby focusing on the genre of science fiction as a reflection of scientific and philosophical pardigms, both past and present. By outlining the history of science fiction literature from the ancients to the present, Zentz parallels the changes in its scope and vision with the progress of scientific research and discovery. Central to the text is the rapidly shifting and increasingly intricate nature of modern scientific knowledge and how difficult it is for science fiction writers to incorporate that knowledge into their works. These problems are addressed, and possible solutions are suggested. Zentz offers this work as resource material for teachers and students of science fiction as well as devoted science fiction readers interested in exploring the conceptual framework in which the genre is grounded.
GREGORY L. ZENTZ is presently Senior Technical Representative for Fisher Scientific Company and is based in Jacksonville, Florida. He contributed an essay to Contours of the Fantastic: Selected Essays from the Eighth International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts (Greenwood Press, 1990). He is currently applying his interest in the philosophy and history of science towards completion of a science fiction novel.