• EABOD25@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    Modern sci-fi was created by an extremely depressed widow that only thought about the social and scientific repercussions of bringing her husband back from the dead and put it in the form of literature. And appreciation for Sci Fi has been around for a very long time. Nosferatur, The Haunting, House on Haunted Hill, The Blob, The Day The Earth Stood Still, War Of The World’s, etc…

    • Spiderwort@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      1 month ago

      No, modern sci-fi evolved over time like all the other complex stuff tends to.

      Modern sci-fi is created by every fellow with strange idea. Who thinks maybe I could get my idea across better if I framed it as a narrative and put it in scientific terms. because science is such a lovely language for talking about strange ideas.

      • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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        1 month ago

        You know, you’re both right.

        modern sci-fi is indeed a collective thing that has evolved from its roots. The seed that grew into sci-fi was indeed Mary Shelley.

        However, that depends on the term modern meaning something different from sci-fi as a whole, and when you cut off the start point of modern. If you count all science based fiction as modern, then Shelley is the defining origin.

      • EABOD25@lemm.ee
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        1 month ago

        Mary Shelley’s Frankentstein is noted to be the future sci-fi story. Mary at the time was dealing with grief of the death of her husband. That’s all I’m saying

  • HubertManne@moist.catsweat.com
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    1 month ago

    It is funny. There are so many things in modern day that would be a dream come true to young me but it all goes dystopia and all the fantasy and scifi is one of those things. I thought I would love so much but so much is not done well. I sorta feel for gay people because being into scifi was a subculture but it going mainstream has greatly diminished the subculture as it sorta becomes unnecessary but I miss that small group feeling.

    • abbadon420@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      That’s not entirely true. There’s still good sci-fi being made. Look at the expanse, dark, altered carbon.

      I dont know much about newer books, but I m sure there’s good scifi writers out there still. What comes to mind is ready player one, red rising, pines, although these are all 10 years old by now. It illustrates that it’s not just the era of Heinlein and Asimov that counts.

      • HubertManne@moist.catsweat.com
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        1 month ago

        Yeah its not so much good sci-fi is not being made as there is such innundation that its more of a diamond in the rough kind of thing and Im talking more media than literature.

    • Spiderwort@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      1 month ago

      Greg Egan, Iain Banks and Sam Hughes are good stuff, if you haven’t.

      Also, there’s this amazing new genre, “LitRpg”. Basically fantasy where an rpg type videogame became real.

      Most of it is the usual dreck but some of it goes hard sf, delving into the existential stuff.

      A couple of the rationalists have even taken a swing.

      Try

      Mother of Learning

      Death after death

      Friendship is optimal

      So ya, real development is still alive.

      • elephantium@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        LitRpg

        I don’t think this is new; The Sleeping Dragon by Joel Rosenberg was published in 1983 where players in a tabletop RPG get whooshed into the game world at the beginning of the book. Fun series.

      • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        If we count Frankenstein as scifi…

        Then stuff centuries earlier also count as scifi, and she’s out of the discussion again.

        • HikingVet@lemmy.ca
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          1 month ago

          If we count stuff earlier than 1898 your statement is false from the jump.

          Also there are other authors that published what is considered sci-fi before 1898 as well.

          • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            If we count stuff earlier than 1898 your statement is false from the jump

            I never said we should…

            I view the begining of scif as the 60s maybe late 50s.

            My point was if you’re taking it back to Shelly, by the same logic we’d have to take it back further. Which you apparently agree with?

            • Badabinski@kbin.earth
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              1 month ago

              What about War of the Worlds? That was published in 1898. Are you saying the book where aliens invade from Mars and then die because of their inability to tolerate our microbial biome isn’t science fiction?

              EDIT: or what about 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea? That’s 1870.

              EDIT: shit, what about The Last Man?

              The Last Man is an apocalyptic, dystopian science fiction novel by Mary Shelley, first published in 1826. The narrative concerns Europe in the late 21st century, ravaged by the rise of a bubonic plague pandemic that rapidly sweeps across the entire globe, ultimately resulting in the near-extinction of humanity.

              that’s the most sci-fi sounding gd thing tho

              • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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                1 month ago

                In the 2nd century some guy wrote about travelling to the moon…

                Where he found Moon people who were at war with the sun people.

                By your definition, isn’t that also SciFi?

                • Badabinski@kbin.earth
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                  1 month ago

                  Kinda! I wouldn’t say that it is exactly science fiction since our modern understanding of the scientific method didn’t really exist back then, but it’s fiction using extrapolations of what might be possible based upon the natural rules of the world. Those extrapolations are used to justify and explain the things that would otherwise be impossible, which is the core of what science fiction is to me. It probably doesn’t vibe like modern sci-fi, but science fiction is not based on vibes.

                  Like, don’t get me wrong, I fucking love 50s and 60s sci-fi. I read Rendezvous with Rama when I was 8 and the novelization of 2001 right afterwards and that had a tremendous impact on my life. I just don’t think Arthur C. Clarke or Heinlein or Asimov created science fiction. They pioneered new subgenres and ideas that have been hugely influential for everything that came afterwards.

            • entropicdrift@lemmy.sdf.org
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              1 month ago

              Biology is science. Medical science is science. The lack of robots and computers does not disqualify it as sci-fi.

              It’s a piece of speculative fiction asking “what if these medical advances (plus a few new fictional breakthroughs by a genius) led to the creation of a new life?” That’s science fiction.

  • Endymion_Mallorn@kbin.melroy.org
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    1 month ago

    That’s a perspective on Mary Shelley that I hadn’t considered. But she was reasonably well-adjusted and popular. And yes I do consider Frankenstein to be the first English science fiction.

  • shoulderoforion@fedia.io
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    1 month ago

    i dunno, ok, but that’s like saying the theory of relativity, or the mona lisa, was created by a neurodivergent and co-opted by normies. some of us are artists, and some of us work the fields. without either we all starve.

        • Spiderwort@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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          1 month ago

          Oh zing!

          See, it’s always an argument over value with you people.

          So it’s always about who gets the credit. Who gets valued and who doesn’t. Who wins and who loses. That eternal muck of monkey dominance battles.

          This bs dominates the common mind utterly. There’s no room for art there. It’s invisible.

            • Spiderwort@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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              1 month ago

              No, that’s just your damn limited, dominance games obsessed perspective talking.

              My point is actually the quality and appreciation of modern science fiction.