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  1. Jan 26, 2021 · The citations lean toward so-called hard science fiction (defined as science fiction based on hard science, which does not violate known scientific laws), and origin dates thin out in recent decades.

    • Alien Species/Worlds
    • Humanity
    • Novums
    • SF “Laws”
    • Some Subgenres
    • General Themes and Concepts
    Alien Invasion: Beings from space come to Earth to conquer. See also: TV Tropes.
    BEM: Abbreviation for bug-eyed monster, or an extra-terrestrial monster with bulging eyes. See also: SFE.
    First Contact: The first meeting between two different intelligent species. See also: TV Tropes. SFE.
    Eugenics: The modification and concentration of supposedly desirable human traits (and eliminations of supposedly undesirable ones) by selective breeding programs and/or the sterilization of the “u...
    First Man / Last Man: Narratives in which we see the beginning of a new human race, or the end of the human race. TV Tropes.
    Ansible: An instantaneous communication device, not limited by the speed of light. See also: TV Tropes. SFE.
    Babel Fish: A living fish which, when placed in your ear, will live there and translate any form of language for you. See also: TV Tropes.
    Cryogenics: The science of low temperatures (originally the science of creating low temperatures). See also: TV Tropes.  SFE.
    Afrofuturism: A form of science fiction that uses Fantasy, Science Fiction, and Magic Realism to examine black culture. See also: TV Tropes.
    Alternate History/Alt-History: A subgenre of science fiction wherein at least one aspect of history is different from that of our own world; the setting of such stories. See also: TV Tropes. SFE.
    Anime: a Japanese animated film or television program, drawn in a meticulously detailed style, usually featuring characters with distinctive large, staring eyes, and typically having a science-fict...
  2. Oct 12, 2021 · Shelley's best-known work, Frankenstein (1818), is often championed as the first science fiction novel, ushering in a blending of the Gothic novel, Romanticism and scientific extrapolation that would shape the genre for centuries. However, less well remembered is The Last Man (1826), Shelley's portrayal of a global pandemic which causes the ...

    • Glyn Morgan
    • 2021
  3. Sep 19, 2022 · Science fiction, popularly shortened as sci-fi, is a genre of fiction that creatively depicts real or imaginary science and technology as part of its plot, setting, or theme. The fiction part of science fiction means, of course, that it’s a fictional story—not a real-life account. The word science refers to the fact that the story in some ...

  4. Feb 19, 2021 · Lucasfilm. Fast-forward to the present when Sheidlower crafted a whole sci-fi dictionary to share online. It has 1,800 entries, some of which date back to the early 20th century. It’s pretty ...

  5. Oct 9, 2020 · Margaret Atwood declared—countering Ursula Le Guin—that she does not write science fiction at all (Atwood, 2011). Public audiences identify such “shy-fi” authors as dissembling. All 24 comments below Atwood’s article define her work, alongside Orwell’s 1984, or Huxley’s Brave New World, as science fiction. Reader “Mmmrrrggglll ...

  6. Jul 26, 2018 · Trackbacks. Literary and cultural historians describe science fiction (SF) as the premiere narrative form of modernity because authors working in this genre extrapolate from Enlightenment ideals and industrial practices to imagine how educated people using machines and other technologies might radically change the material world.

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