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  2. Social fiction is a broad term to describe any work of speculative fiction that features social commentary (as opposed to, say, hypothetical technology) in the foreground. Social science fiction is a subgenre thereof, where social commentary (cultural or political) takes place in a sci-fi universe.

  3. Social science fiction is a subgenre of science fiction, usually (but not necessarily) soft science fiction, concerned less with technology/ space opera and more with speculation about society. In other words, it "absorbs and discusses anthropology" and speculates about human behavior and interactions. External videos.

  4. The Saga of Recluce. The Sentimental Agents in the Volyen Empire. SF8. Shikasta. The Sirian Experiments. The Sleeper Awakes. The Status Civilization.

  5. In fact, social science fiction is a contemporary development of classic science fiction: it involves the same imaginative leaps into the future, it uses some of the same stylized conventions (time travel, interplanetary explorations), props (spaceships, robots), and characters (aliens, androids), but only as incidental backdrops to a new ...

  6. Thus, in an essay on Robin Cook, Thomas Dunn has used the term "social science fiction" to mark off a brand of socially conscious and committed sf; while in an essay on Blade Runner (1982), Yves Chevrier has coined the term. "sociology-fiction" to map the relationship between aesthetic and political. modalities.

  7. This is a list of social science fiction writers with their best-known works. Iain M. Banks - The Culture series; Malorie Blackman - The Noughts & Crosses series; Octavia E. Butler - Parable of the Sower; Ray Bradbury - Fahrenheit 451; Renee Gladman – The Ravicka series; Robert A. Heinlein; Aldous Huxley - Brave New World; James Howard ...

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