Publishing and the Science Fiction Canon
Science fiction was being written throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, but it underwent a rapid expansion of cultural dissemination and popularity at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth century. This Element explores the ways this explosion in interest in 'scientific romance', that informs today's global science fiction culture, manifests the specific historical exigences of the revolutions in publishing and distribution technology. H. G. Wells, Jules Verne and other science fiction writers embody in their art the advances in material culture that mobilize, reproduce and distribute with new rapidity, determining the cultural logic of twentieth-century science fiction in the process.
Product details
October 2018Adobe eBook Reader
9781108573122
0 pages
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Notes on the concept of a canon
- Scientific romance
- The nineteenth-century book market
- The conditions of development 1880–1910
- The extraordinisation of ordinary voyages
- Science fiction's visual cultures
- Conclusion.