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      • It was only to be in the early 1990s when Chinese science fiction would enter an uninterrupted golden age, and leading the charge would be writers who’ve lived through the Cultural Revolution, being born just before or during it, the ‘three generals of Chinese science fiction’: Wang Jiankang, Han Song and the name most familiar to non-Chinese science fiction fans, Liu Cixin, the author of The Three-Body Problem, the novel that was instrumental in opening the floodgates of Chinese SF to the...
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  2. 1 day ago · Science fiction is born from science, but it can also die from science. From this perspective, it is still unknown whether Chinese science fiction can usher in a golden age. To expand on this, science fiction literature stems from people’s detached strangeness and curiosity about science.

  3. Feb 27, 2017 · In China, this is science fiction's golden age | New Scientist. As China reaches for the stars, with plans for a permanent space station and a Mars mission, its sci-fi is also taking on the...

  4. The Post's Rachel Cheung has interviewed some of China's new science fiction authors to find out what inspires them -- and what they think makes Chinese science fiction unique.

  5. May 14, 2017 · It’s not the first golden age of sci-fi in China, though. Wang Yao says that was between 1978 and 1983 during reforms initiated by late Deng Xiaoping. “It was thought that science fiction...

    • Rachel Cheung
  6. Oct 22, 2023 · "I don't think Chinese science fiction has entered a golden age. Although Chinese sci-fi is very popular now, it has gone from a very marginalized existence to a spotlight," Liu told...

  7. Sep 12, 2018 · It's the golden age of Chinese science fiction. *Yeah, it probably is. Why them, why now? A lot of reasons. (...) The two winning books are now being adapted for the big screen in China, marking...

  8. Apr 15, 2019 · The emergence of these writers and their ideas has many experts asking: Is this a golden age of Chinese science fiction? The Post’s Rachel Cheung has interviewed some of China’s new science fiction authors to find out what inspires them — and what they think makes Chinese science fiction unique.