Difference between revisions of "Science-Fantasy"
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+ | (Did you mean the [[Science Fantasy (UK)|British semiprozine]]?) | ||
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A classification sometimes used for [[science-fiction]] proper. But in this volume it designates [[science-fiction]] in which [[fantasy]] elements are vital -- e g ''Lest Darkness Fall'', in which hero Padway is struck by lightning and thus transferred to decadent Rome, where all his other actions are [[science-fictional]]; or those in which the author (like [[Ego Clarke]] in ''The City and The Stars'') depicts the accomplishments of a science so advanced that it merges with wish-fulfillment [[fantasy]]. | A classification sometimes used for [[science-fiction]] proper. But in this volume it designates [[science-fiction]] in which [[fantasy]] elements are vital -- e g ''Lest Darkness Fall'', in which hero Padway is struck by lightning and thus transferred to decadent Rome, where all his other actions are [[science-fictional]]; or those in which the author (like [[Ego Clarke]] in ''The City and The Stars'') depicts the accomplishments of a science so advanced that it merges with wish-fulfillment [[fantasy]]. |
Revision as of 17:46, 14 February 2021
(Did you mean the British semiprozine?)
From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959 |
A classification sometimes used for science-fiction proper. But in this volume it designates science-fiction in which fantasy elements are vital -- e g Lest Darkness Fall, in which hero Padway is struck by lightning and thus transferred to decadent Rome, where all his other actions are science-fictional; or those in which the author (like Ego Clarke in The City and The Stars) depicts the accomplishments of a science so advanced that it merges with wish-fulfillment fantasy. |
See also: Fantasy, Science Fiction, Classification of Fantasy.
Fanspeak |
This is a fanspeak page. Please extend it by adding information about when and by whom it was coined, whether it’s still in use, etc. |