SFRA Officer Candidate Statements Now Available

August 21, 2008

Make haste and read the officer candidate statements for the upcoming SFRA elections on the official website here.  The candidates for the 2009-2011 term are:

President–Jan Bogstad and Lisa Yaszek

Vice-President–Oscar De Los Santos and Ritch Calvin

Treasurer–Donald “Mack” Hassler and Patrick Sharp

Secretary–Rochelle “Shelley” Rodrigo and Ed Carmien

As you can see, this is a well-qualified group of nominees.  Best of luck to all the candidates, and don’t forget to vote!


ONTAP 5 Minute Teaching Session – Sci-Fi or SF?

August 20, 2008

Today, I had to give a five minute lesson to my ONTAP group at Kent State University as part of graduate teaching assistant training.  We were asked to teach the class something that we were familiar with, it could be on any subject, and we could teach it anyway we wished.  I chose to teach everyone the distinction between sci-fi and SF.  I got some good comments from everyone in class, which ranged from “I watch a lot of Science Fiction movies, and now I have the language to talk to my friends about it more effectively,” to, “I didn’t really follow what you were saying.”  I tried to construct it to connect with everyone, but I guess Michael Berube was right and we’re “teaching to the six.”  Anyways, I’ve included my notes below (I would have included the video that they made, but it’s on VHS tape and I don’t have an easy way to convert it for posting on YouTube).  Enjoy!

ONTAP 5 Minute Teaching Session

Today let’s talk about Science Fiction, sci-fi, and SF.  Science Fiction, as the scholar Darko Suvin puts it, is the literature of “cognitive estrangement.”  What does that mean?  Science Fiction is estranging, that is it puts the reader in unfamiliar territory.  You might say that other literature such as the gothic or even postmodern literature does the same thing, and you’d be right.  However, what sets Science Fiction apart is the cognitive aspect of its estranging function.  The cognitive estranging aspect of Science Fiction is called the novum, which is the technological and scientific extrapolation from the here-and-now that is the kernel of the story, the techno-scientific kernel of the narrative that is essential to the story and sets it apart from mainstream or fantasy literature.  What are some novum examples?  One example of the novum might be robots.  Can you name some others?  Space ships, ray guns, aliens, and humans with a multiplicity of sexes rather than just male and female are a few other examples.

Okay, so now you roughly know what Science Fiction is, however did you know that Science Fiction is a little more complicated than that?  You see, for much of the history of Science Fiction, beginning with its naming by the pulp magazine publisher, Hugo Gernsback, in 1929, academic and journalist elites have often sneered at Science Fiction as marginal, low, or pop culture.  These Science Fiction detractors pointed to the weakest stories and worst movies as examples of the supposed overall low quality of Science Fiction.  An early response to this problem was offered by the Science Fiction author Theordore Sturgeon in the 1950s when he stated that, “ninety percent of everything is crap.”  That observation is now known as Sturgeon’s Law and is available in the Oxford English Dictionary.  Sturgeon’s point is that there’s a lot of good Science Fiction, but there’s a lot more bad stuff that people point to when they talk about Science Fiction.  Also, the implication is that ninety percent of mainstream literature is also crap, and canonical literature such as Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet isn’t derided because of the multitude of trashy Romance novels.

This state of affairs expanded with the widespread adoption of the truncated term, sci-fi.  Sci-fi became widely used to describe Science Fiction by journalists with an implied insult toward the genre as a whole. 

In the 1970s, Science Fiction scholars and critics decided it was time to distinguish hackwork from the 10% of good stuff.   The new term for the best work, which often received the most critical attention, was simply SF.  SF works are those based on a novum and are as well or better written than its mainstream counterparts.  Sci-fi was used to label works with a much less extrapolated novum, and a very low level of quality in writing or production in the case of movies or television. 

So, what are some examples of SF and sci-fi?  A recent example of SF film would be The Matrix.  It extrapolates from our world to create a reasonably plausible future based around computer simulation, autonomous robot beings, and a planet devastated by war.  An example of sci-fi would be George Lucas’ Star Wars movies.  Sure, there are space ships, ray guns, and aliens, but there’s also the Force, which is more fantasy than Science Fiction, and the laws of physics are violated egregiously in space such as having things slide off space ships in outer space as if it were an airplane in the Earth’s atmosphere.  What are some Science Fiction movies that you’ve seen, and what would you classify them as–sci-fi or SF?  Some other examples of sci-fi include Plan 9 From Outer Sapce, Back to the Future, Cloverfield, and Red Planet.  Other examples of SF include A.I. Artificial Intelligence, A Scanner Darkly, WALL-E, The Dark Knight, and Mission to Mars.

Now you’re all initiate Science Fiction scholars who know the difference between SF and sci-fi!


Aerodynamics and Rocket Turbopumps, a Washington, DC Vacation

August 18, 2008

 

Yufang and I jaunted to Washington, DC for a few days this past week for some much needed R & R.  While we were there, we visited the National Air and Space Museum (NASM), the NASM Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center, walked the Mall at night, and dropped in at the Smithsonian Zoo, albeit when most of the critters were on break.  Also, we enjoyed ginormous fried shrimp with my cousin, Angie, in Mechanicsville, Maryland, and the next day, Yufang and I trekked to Bob’s Noodle 66 at the end of the red metro line for some delicious Taiwanese food.  It was a great trip, and Yufang was a real trooper, enduring countless aircraft (e.g., SR-71 Blackbird, B-29 Enola Gay, Concorde, F-86 Sabre Jet) and equally numerous spacecraft and rockets (e.g., Space Shuttle Enterprise, V-2 Rocket, SpaceShipOne, and Apollo 11 Command Module) as well as my meticulous explanations about how they work and why they are important.  She clearly has the patience of Job!

One curious thing I found at the Udvar-Hazy Center’s McDonnell Space Hangar was Willy Ley’s 1956 Hugo Award.  See it here.

I’ve posted about 200 of our 400 photos on Flickr here.


Paul Kincaid’s What It Is We Do When We Read Science Fiction

August 18, 2008

Before a week’s long vacation, I finished reading and writing a review of Paul Kincaid’s What It Is We Do When We Read Science Fiction.  This is a great collection of Kincaid’s essays on a variety of topics centered around SF and the fantastic.  

In his introductory essay, from which the title of the book is taken, he tackles one of the major concerns of SF scholarship, which is the definition of SF.  He skillfully manages to create a pragmatic definition that draws on Samuel R. Delany’s idea of a SF language, or what Damien Broderick calls the SF “mega-text.”  

The collection is broken down into these sections:  Theory, Practice, Christopher Priest, Britain, the World, Gene Wolfe, and 1 April 1984.  The Priest section is very strong, and there are many other insightful and enthusiastically written pieces throughout the thirty-two essays and reviews in the book.

Keep an eye out for my full review in an upcoming issue of Foundation:  The International Review of Science Fiction.

Discover more of Paul Kincaid’s scholarship online here, and read about his current work on his blog here.


Sonja Fritzsche’s Science Fiction Literature in East Germany

August 1, 2008

I finished reading Sonja Fritzsche’s Science Fiction Literature in East Germany (2006) for a review that I’m writing for The German Quarterly.  Before writing the review, I do want to share some of my first impressions as I organize my thoughts for the official review. 

This is a fantastic synthesis of history and cultural analysis of Deutsche Demokratische Republik (DDR) SF.  Fritzsche opens up an often-neglected field of SF research with this work.  Building on a dearth of earlier scholarly work on DDR SF, she builds a history of the DDR, SF authors, SF publishers, and DDR fandom through a contextualization of Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschland (SED) policies and the thematic and theoretical elements of a variety of DDR SF, but focusing a deep analysis on three emblematic works:  Eberhardt Del Antonio’s Heimkehr der Vorfahren (Return of the Forefathers, 1966), Johanna and Günter Braun’s Unheimliche Erscheinungsformen auf Omega XI (Uncanny Manifestations on Omega XI, 1974), and Angela and Karlheinz Steinmüller’s Der Traummeister (The Dream Master, 1990).

Fritzsche’s Science Fiction Literature in East Germany succeeds at adding to SF history as well as DDR history.  I recommend this book to SF and German Studies scholars alike–it has much to offer to SF and German discourses.  Also, I have to find translations of some of these books that she writes about, because they sound so damn interesting!

Keep an eye out for my full, very positive review in an upcoming issue of The German Quarterly.


Work and Relaxation, or Introduction to Wood Shop

August 1, 2008

I haven’t taken much of a break since Spring semester ended in May.   I took a pedagogical course with Brian Huot, and wrote and presented a paper at the 39th annual SFRA conference in Lawrence, Kansas.  I picked up a new hat from SFRA and became its Publicity Director.  As such, I wrote a press release on the Lawrence meeting, which I’ll send out to the great SF magazines and journals once I finalize photo permissions.  Now, I’m doing two book reviews–one for The German Quarterly and another for Foundation.  I have a few weeks left before Fall semester begins and I still have to develop a syllabus for my writing class.  I know that I’ll get it all done, but I need some extra relief from all this academic work!

One fun project this past week was building a new stand for Yufang’s electric piano.  Her “professional” stand was too high for her to comfortably tickle the ivory, so I suggested that I build her a lower stand at a fraction of the cost of a store-bought stand.  After a lot of planning, measuring, and figuring, I picked up some lumber from Lowes and put together a new stand to accommodate her Yamaha.  Unfortunately, I didn’t consider the placement of the piano’s speakers, which are underneath its body.  So, I added a Ryobi jigsaw to my toolbox and opened up the table top with spacious sound holes.  Again, something wasn’t quite right–the keyboard wasn’t level.  For some reason, the back of the Yahama is 3/4” lower than the front, which makes the keys skew upwards at about 10 degrees.  Back in the garage, I added 3/4” stands behind the sound holes to elevate the rear of the piano so that it was properly level.  Now, she has a badass stand that assists her showing off her mad skillz.

Logically, the next thing I wanted to do after handling power tools is kill monsters in an immersive virtual environment–World of Warcraft.  I hadn’t played my two accounts in a long time (one of these gratis Matt Jasper), so I wanted to get back into the fray on Ner’zhul and kick some PvP ass.  Since I last played, I had installed Apple’s Mac OS X 10.5.4 software update.  When I launched WoW I learned that this update nerfs WoW and my OS in a big way.  As a result, I reinstalled Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard twice (Why?  Because that’s how I roll) troubleshooting the problem.  Now, I’m running 10.5.2 and WoW without any problems. I expect to enforce Horde values later this evening–beware.

In two weeks, Yufang and I are traveling to Washington, DC for a few days to check out an SR-71 Blackbird and a Space Shuttle at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum annex next to the Washington-Dulles International Airport.  We’ll also do some other sightseeing while we’re there, and maybe we’ll have a chance to hang out with my cousin Angie.  More on this when we get back!


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