Astrofuturism: Science, Race, and Visions of Utopia in Space

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University of Pennsylvania Press, 2003 - Literary Criticism - 294 pages

Astrofuturism: Science, Race, and Visions of Utopia in Space is the first full-scale analysis of an aesthetic, scientific, and political movement that sought the amelioration of racial difference and social antagonisms through the conquest of space. Drawing on the popular science writing and science fiction of an eclectic group of scientists, engineers, and popular writers, De Witt Douglas Kilgore investigates how the American tradition of technological utopianism responded to the political upheavals of the twentieth century.

Founded in the imperial politics and utopian schemes of the nineteenth century, astrofuturism envisions outer space as an endless frontier that offers solutions to the economic and political problems that dominate the modern world. Its advocates use the conventions of technological and scientific conquest to consolidate or challenge the racial and gender hierarchies codified in narratives of exploration. Because the icon of space carries both the imperatives of an imperial past and the democratic hopes of its erstwhile subjects, its study exposes the ideals and contradictions endemic to American culture.

Kilgore argues that in the decades following the Second World War the subject of race became the most potent signifier of political crisis for the predominantly white and male ranks of astrofuturism. In response to criticism inspired by the civil rights movement and the new left, astrofuturists imagined space frontiers that could extend the reach of the human species and heal its historical wounds. Their work both replicated dominant social presuppositions and supplied the resources necessary for the critical utopian projects that emerged from the antiracist, socialist, and feminist movements of the twentieth century.

This survey of diverse bodies of literature conveys the dramatic and creative syntheses that astrofuturism envisions between people and machines, social imperatives and political hope, physical knowledge and technological power. Bringing American studies, utopian literature, popular conceptions of race and gender, and the cultural study of science and technology into dialogue, Astrofuturism will provide scholars of American culture, fans of science fiction, and readers of science writing with fresh perspectives on both canonical and cutting-edge astrofuturist visions.

 

Contents

The Wonderful Dream
1
Knocking on Heavens Door David Lasser and the First Conquest of Space
31
An Empire in Space Europe and America as Science Fact
49
Building a Space Frontier Robert A Heinlein and the American Tradition
82
Will There Always Be an England? Arthur C Clarkes New Eden
111
The Domestication of Space Gerard K ONeills Suburban Diaspora
150
Ben Bova Race Nation and Renewal on the High Frontier
186
On Mars and Other Heterotopias A Conclusion
222
Abbreviations
239
Notes
241
Index
285
Acknowledgments
293
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About the author (2003)

De Witt Douglas Kilgore teaches English at Indiana University.

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