000 01759cam a2200145ua 4500
020 _a9788126910366
082 _a808.838762
_bRAT/S
100 _aRatnakar D. Bhelkar
245 1 0 _aScience fiction: fantasy and reality
260 _aNew Delhi
_bAtlantic
_c2009
300 _a138p.
520 _aScience Fiction (SF) suggests a hybrid form of novel, partaking of both ordinary fiction and elements of science. One of the unacknowledged pleasures of reading SF is that it challenges readers to decide whether what they are reading is within the bounds of the possible. The degree of a willing suspension of disbelief varies from one novel to another. In its initial phase, SF was criticised as a brash, emotionally dry, and a commercial form which appeared in pulp magazines but today it is an established genre of fiction. Readers from different spheres of life are turning to it as an important “sign of times”. The supreme blend of fantasy and reality as exhibited by H.G. Wells is luring more and more readers. The purpose of Science Fiction: Fantasy and Reality is to explore the relationship between fantasy and reality in the major British SF from 1890 to 1970 in their diverse manifestations. An attempt has been made to find answers to the following key questions: (1) Why does a writer create fantasy? (2) How does a writer make fantasy acceptable to the readers? and (3) What is a writer’s approach to reality? In answering these questions, the works of major SF writers like H.G. Wells, Olaf Stapledon, Aldous Huxley, George Orwell and Arthur C. Clarke among others have been analysed. The book will prove extremely useful to the students and teachers of SF and researchers in this field.
650 0 _aScience fiction
942 _cBK
999 _c23583
_d23583