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On the Poetics of the Science Fiction Genre

Author(s): Darko Suvin


Source: College English, Vol. 34, No. 3 (Dec., 1972), pp. 372-382
Published by: National Council of Teachers of English
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/375141 .
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DARKO SUVIN

On the Poeticsof the ScienceFiction Genre'

Science Fiction As Fiction the last 100 years, regardless of local and
(Estrangement) short-range fluctuations. SF has particu-
THE IMPORTANCE OF science fiction (SF) larly affected some key strata of modern
in our time is on the increase. First, there society such as the college graduates,
are strong indications that its popularity young writers, and general readers ap-
in the leading industrial nations (USA, preciative of new sets of values. This is
USSR, UK, Japan) has risen sharply over a significant cultural effect which goes
beyond any merely quantitative census.
Darko Suvin, who received his Ph.D. from the Second, if one takes as differentiae of SF
University of Zagreb and teaches in the Depart- either radically different figures (drama-
ment of English at McGill University, has pub-
lished on drama and on theater as well as on tis personae) or a radically different con-
science fiction, both in English and in Serbo- text of the story, it will be found to have
croatian.
an interesting and close kinship with
1The first version of this essay crystallized
out of a lecture given in the seminar on fantastic other literary sub-genres, which flour-
literature in the Yale University Slavic Depart- ished at different times and places of lit-
ment in Spring 1968. It was presented at Temple
University, Philadelphia, at the University of erary history: the Greek and Hellenistic
Toronto, and at the 1970 conference of the Sci- "blessed island' stories, the "fabulous voy-
ence Fiction Research Association at Queens-
age" from Antiquity on, the Renaissance
borough Community College, New York. I am and Baroque "utopia" and "planetary
grateful for the opportunity of discussing it in
these places. In particular I have derived much novel," the Enlightenment "state (politi-
profit from personal discussion with Professor cal) novel," the modern "anticipation,"
David Porter at the University of Massachusetts,
J. Michael Holquist and Jacques Ehrmann at "anti-utopia," etc. Moreover, although
Yale, with Mr. James Blish and Miss Judy SF shares with myth, fantasy, fairy tale
Merril, and with my colleagues at McGill Uni- and pastoral an opposition to naturalistic
versity, Michael Bristol, Irwin Gopnik, Myrna or empiricist literary genres, it differs
Gopnik, and Donald F. Theall. This final
version owes much to Stanislow Lem's Fan- very significantly in approach and social
tastyka i futurologia, undoubtedly the most function from such adjoining non-natu-
significant full-scale morphological, philosoph- ralistic or meta-empirical genres. Both of
ical, and sociological survey of modern SF
so far, which has considerably emboldened me these complementary aspects, the socio-
in the further pursuit of this elusive field, even
where I differed from some of its conclusions. logical and the methodological, are being
I am also much indebted to the stimulus given vigorously debated among writers and
by members of my graduate seminar on SF in critics in several countries; both testify
the Department of English at McGill Univer- to the relevance of this genre and the
sity. The final responsibility for the structure
and conclusions of the essay cannot be shifted need of scholarly discussion too.
onto any other shoulders than mine, however In the following paper I shall argue for
little I may believe in private property over
a definition of SF as the literature of cog-
ideas. "Literature" and "literary" are in this
essay synonymous with "fiction (al)". nitive estrangement. This definition seems

372
On the Poetics of the Science Fiction Genre 373

to possess the unique advantage of ren- the literary mainstream of our civilization
dering justice to a literary tradition has been nearer to the first of the two
which is coherent through the ages and above-mentioned extremes. However, at
within itself, and yet distinct from non- the beginnings of a literature, the con-
fictional utopianism, from naturalistic lit- cern with a domestication of the amazing
erature, and from other non-naturalistic is very strong. Early tale-tellers tell about
fiction. It thus permits us to lay the basis amazing voyages into the next valley
of a coherent poetics of SF. where they found dog-headed people,
I should like to approach such a dis- also good rock salt which could be stolen
cussion, and this field of discourse, by or at the worst bartered for. Their stories
postulating a spectrum or spread of liter- are a syncretic travelog and voyage im-
ary subject-matter, running from the aginaire, daydream and intelligence re-
ideal extreme of exact recreation of the port. This implies a curiosity about the
author's empirical environment2 to ex- unknown beyond the next mountain
clusive interest in a strange newness, a range (sea, ocean, solar system . ..),
novum. From the 18th to the 20th century, where the thrill of knowledge joined the
thrill of adventure.
2A virtue of discussing this seemingly periph- An island in the far-off ocean is the
eral subject of "science fiction" and its "utopian"
tradition is that one has to go back to first paradigm of the aesthetically most satis-
principles, one cannot really assume them as fying goal of the SF voyage, from Iambu-
given-such as in this case what is literature. lus and Euhemerus through the classical
Usually, when discussing literature one deter-
mines what it says (its subject matter) and how utopia to Verne's island of Captain Nemo
it says what is says (the approach to its themes). and Wells' island of Dr. Moreau, especial-
If we are talking about literature in the sense of
ly if we subsume under this the plane-
significant works possessing certain minimal
aesthetic qualities rather than in the sociological tary island in the aether ocean-usually
sense of everything that gets published at a the Moon-from Lucian through Cyrano
certain time or the ideological sense of all the and Swift's mini-Moon of Laputa to the
writings on certain themes, this principle can 19th century. Yet the parallel paradigm
more precisely be formulated as a double ques-
tion. First, epistemologically, what possibility of the valley, "over the range"3 which
for aesthetic qualities is offered by different shuts it in as a wall, is perhaps as reveal-
thematic fields ("subjects")? The answer of
dominant aesthetics at the moment is-an ab- ing. It recurs almost as frequently, from
solutely equal possibility, and with this answer the earliest folk tales about the sparkling
our aesthetics kicks the question out of its field
into the lap of ideologists who pick it up by valley of Terrestrial Paradise and the dark
default and proceed to bungle it. Second, his- valley of the Dead, both already in Gilga-
torically, how has such a possibility in fact been mesh. Eden is the mythological localiza-
used? Once you begin with such considerations tion of utopian longing, just as Wells'
you come quickly up against the rather unclear
concept of realism (not the prose literary move- valley in the Country of the Blind is still
ment in the 19th century but a meta-historical within the liberating tradition which con-
stylistic principle), since the SF genre is often tends that the world is not necessarily the
pigeonholded as non-realistic. I would not ob-
ject but would heartily welcome such labels if way our present empirical valley happens
one had first persuasively defined what is "real" to be, and that whoever thinks his valley
and what is "reality". True, this genre raises is the world, is blind. Whether island or
basic philosophical issues; but is perhaps not
necessary to face them in a first approach. valley, whether in space or (from the in-
Therefore I shall here substitute for "realism" dustrial and bourgeois revolutions on) in
and "reality" the concept of "the author's em-
pirical environment", which seems as immediate- 3Sub-title of Samuel Butler's SF novel
ly clear as any. Erewhon.
374 COLLEGE ENGLISH

time, the new framework is correlative to anthropological and historical approach


the new inhabitants. The aliens-uto- in the opus of Bertolt Brecht, who
pians, monsters or simply differing stran- wanted to write "plays for a scientific
gers-are a mirror to man just as the dif- age." While working on a play about the
fering country is a mirror for his world. prototype scientist Galileo, he defined
But the mirror is not only a reflecting this attitude (Verfremdungseffekt) in his
one, it is also a transforming one, virgin Short Organon for the Theatre (1948):
womb and alchemical dynamo: the mir- "A representation which estranges is one
ror is a crucible. which allows us to recognize its subject,
Thus, it is not only the basic human but at the same time makes it seem un-
and humanizing curiosity that gives birth familiar." And further: for somebody to
to SF. Beside an undirected inquisitive- see all normal happenings in a dubious
ness, a semantic game without clear re- light, "he would need to develop that
ferent, this genre has always been wedded detached eye with which the great Gali-
to a hope of finding in the unknown the leo observed a swinging chandelier. He
ideal environment, tribe, state, intelli- was amazed by the pendulum motion as
gence or other aspect of the Supreme if he had not expected it and could not
Good (or to a fear of and revulsion from understand its occurring, and this enabled
its contrary). At all events, the possibil- him to come at the rules by which it was
ity of other strange, co-variant coordinate governed." Thus, the look of estrange-
systems and semantic fields is assumed. ment is both cognitive and creative; and
The approach to the imaginary local- as Brecht goes on to say: "one cannot
ity, or localized daydream, practiced by simply exclaim that such an attitude per-
the genre of SF is a supposedly factual tains to science, but not to art. Why
one. Columbus' (technically or genologi- should not art, in its own way, try to
cally non-fictional) letter on the Eden he serve the great social task of mastering
glimpsed beyond the Orinoco mouth, and Life?'"4 (Later, Brecht was also to note
Swift's (technically non-factual) voyage it might be time to stop speaking in terms
to "Laputa, Balnibarbi, Glubbdubbdrib, of masters and servants altogether.)
Luggnagg and Japan," stand at the oppo-
site ends of a ban between imaginary and 4Viktor Shklovsky,"Iskusstvokak priem",
factual possibilities. Thus SF takes off in Poetika, Petrograd 1919.In the English trans-
from a fictional ("literary") hypothesis lation of this essay"Art as Technique",in Lee
T. Lemon and MarionJ. Reis eds., Russian
and develops it with extrapolating and FormalistCriticism:Four Essays,LincolnNe-
totalizing ("scientific") rigor-in genre, braska 1965, ostranenie is rendered somewhat
Columbus and Swift are more alike than clumsily as "defamiliarization".Cf. also the
classicalsurvey of Victor Erlich,RussianFor-
different. The effect of such factual re- malism: History-Doctrine, The Hague 1955.
porting of fictions is one of confronting a Bertolt Brecht, "KleinesOrganonfiir das
set normative system-a Ptolemaic-type Theater",in his Schriftenzum Theater 7,
Franforta.M. 1964,translatedin John Wil-
closed world picture-with a point of lett ed., Brecht On Theatre, New York
view or glance implying a new set of 1964. My quotation is from p. 192 and 96
of this translation,in WhichI have changed
norms; in literary theory, this is known Mr. Willett's translationof Verfremdung
as the attitude of estrangement. This con- as "alienation" since
into my "estrangement",
cept was first developed on non-natural- alienationevokes incorrect, indeed oppo-
site connotations: estrangementwas for
(ostranenie, Viktor Shklovsky, 1917), Brechtan approachmilitatingdirectlyagainst
and most successfully underpinned by an socialandcognitivealienation.
On the Poeticsof the ScienceFiction Genre 375

In SF, the attitude of estrangement- SF is, then a literarygenre whose nec-


used by Brecht in a different way, within essary and sufficient conditions are the
a still predominantly "realistic" context- presenceand interactionof estrangement
has grown into the formal framework of and cognition, and whose main formal
the genre. device is an imaginativeframework al-
ternative to the author's empirical en-
vironment.
Science Fiction As Cognition The estrangement differentiates it from
(Critique and Science) the "realistic"literary mainstream of 18th
The use of estrangement both as under- to 20th century. The cognition differen-
lying attitude and dominant formal de- tiates it not only from myth, but also
vice is found also in the myth, a ritual from the fairy tale and the fantasy. The
and religious approach looking in its own fairy tale also doubts the laws of the
way beneath the empiric surface. How- author's empirical world, but it escapes
ever, SF sees the norms of any age, in- out of its horizons and into a closed col-
cluding emphatically its own, as unique, lateral world indifferent toward cognitive
changeable, and therefore subject to cog- possibilities. It does not use imagination as
nitive glance. The myth is diametrically a means to understand the tendencies in
opposed to the cognitive approach since reality, but as an end sufficient unto itself
it conceives human relations as fixed, and and cut off from the real contingencies.
supernaturally determined, emphatically The stock fairy-tale accessory, such as
denying Montaigne's: "la constance the flying carpet, evades the empirical
memen'estqu'unbranlepluslanguissant." law of physical gravity-as the hero
The myth absolutizes and even personifies evades social gravity-by imagining its
apparently constant motifs from the slug- opposite. The wishfulfilling element is its
gish periods with low social dynamics. strength and weakness, for it never pre-
Conversely, SF, which is organized by tends that a carpet could be expected to
extrapolating the variable and future- fly--that a humble third son could be ex-
bearing elements from the empirical en- pected to become a king-while there is
vironment, clusters in the great whirlpool gravity. It just posits another world be-
periods of history, such as the 16-17th side yours where some carpets do, magi-
and 19-20th centuries. Where the myth cally, fly, and some paupers do, magical-
claims to explain once and for all the ly, become princes, and into which you
essence of phenomena, SF posits them cross purely by an act of faith and fancy.
first as problems and then explores where Anything is possible in a fairy tale, be-
they lead to; it sees the mythical static cause a fairy tale is manifestly impossible.
identity as an illusion, usually as fraud, in Therefore, SF retrogressing into fairy-
the best case only as a temporary realiza- tale (e.g. "space opera" with a hero-prin-
tion of potentially limitless contingencies. cess-monster triangle in astronautic cos-
It does not ask about The Man or The tume) is committing creative suicide.
World, but which man?: in which kind Even less congenial to SF is the fantasy
of world?: and why such a man in such (ghost, horror, Gothic, weird) tale, a
a kind of world? As a literary genre, SF genre committed to the interposition of
is just as opposed to supernatural es- anti-cognitive laws into the empirical en-
trangement as to empiricism (natural- vironment. Where the fairy tale was in-
ism). different, the fantasy is inimical to the
376 COLLEGE
ENGLISH

empirical world and its laws. The thesis hope can fertilize the SF field as an anti-
could be defended that the fantasy is sig- dote to pragmatism, commercialism,
nificant insofar as it is impure and fails other-directedness and technocracy.
to establish a super-ordinated maleficent Claiming a Galilean or Brunoan es-
world of its own, causing a grotesque trangement for SF does not at all mean
tension between arbitrary supernatural committing it to scientfic vulgarization
phenomena and the empirical norms they or even technological prognostication,
infiltrate.5 Gogol's Nose is so interesting which it was engaged in at various times
because it is walking down the Nevski (Verne, U.S. in the 1920's-1930's, U.S.
Prospect, with a certain rank in the civil S.R. under Stalinism). The needful and
service, etc.; if the Nose were in a com- meritorious task of popularization can be
pletely fantastic world-say H.P. Love- a useful element of the SF works at a
craft's-it would be just another ghoulish juvenile level. But even the roman scien-
thrill. When fantasy does not make for tifique such as Verne's From the Earth to
such a tension between its norms and the Moon-or the surface level of Wells'
the author's empirical environment, its Invisible Man-though a legitimate SF
reduction of all possible horizons to form, is a lower stage in its development.
Death makes of it just a sub-literature of It is very popular with audiences just
mystification. Commercial lumping of it approaching SF, such as the juvenile, be-
into the same category as SF is thus a cause it introduces into the old empirical
grave disservice. context only one easily digestible new
The pastoral is essentially closer to technological variable (Moon missile, or
SF. Its imaginary framework of a world rays which lower the refractive index of
without money economy, state apparatus, organic matter).6 The euphoria provoked
and depersonalizing urbanization allows it by this approach is real but limited, better
to isolate, as in the laboratory, two human suited to the short story and a new
motivations-erotics and power-hunger. audience. It evaporates much quicker as
This approach relates to SF as alchemy the positivistic natural science loses pres-
does to chemistry and nuclear physics: tige in the humanistic sphere after the
an early try in the right direction with World Wars (cf. Nemo's as against the
insufficient sophistication. SF has thus U.S. Navy's atomic "Nautilus"), and
much to learn from the pastoral tradition, surges back with prestigious peace-time
primarily from its directly sensual rela- applications in new methodologies (astro-
tionships without class alientation. It has nautics, cybernetics). Even in Verne, the
in fact often done so, whenever it has structure of the "science novel" is that of
sounded the theme of the triumph of the a pond after a stone has been thrown
humble (Restif, Morris, etc. up to Simak, into it: there is a momentary commotion,
Christopher, Yefremov .. . ). Unfortu- the waves go from impact point to peri-
nately, the baroque pastoral abandoned phery and back, then the system settles
this theme and jelled into a sentimental down as before. The only difference is
convention, discrediting the genre; but that one positivistic fact-usually an item
when the pastoral escapes preciosity, its of hardware-has been added, like the

5Since my first penning these lines, such a 6Note the functionaldifferenceto the anti-
thesis has been ably developed in Tzvetan gravitymetalin Wells'FirstManon the Moon
Todorov, Introduction a la littirature fantas- which is an introductorygadget and not the
tique, Paris 1970. be-all of a much richer novel.
On the Poetics of the Science Fiction Genre 377

stone to the pond bottom. This structure it, and in the corresponding naturalistic
of transient estrangement is specific to or "realistic" literature, ethics are in no
murder mysteries, not to a mature SF. significant relation to physics. Modern
After such delimitations, it is perhaps mainstream literature is forbidden the
possible at least to indicate some differ- pathetic fallacy of earthquakes announc-
entiations within the concept of "cogni- ing the assassination of rulers or drizzles
tiveness" or "cognition". As used here, accompanying the sadness of the hero-
this term does not imply only a reflecting ine. It is the activity of the protagonists,
of but also on reality. It implies a creative interacting with other, physically equally
approach tending toward a dynamic unprivileged figures, that determines the
transformation rather than toward a static outcome. However superior technologi-
mirroring of the author's environment. cally or sociologically one side in the con-
Such typical methodology of SF-from flict may be, any predetermination as to
Lucian, More, Rabelais, Cyrano, and its outcome is felt as an ideological impo-
Swift to Wells, London, Zamiatin, and sition and genological impurity: the basic
the last decades-is a critical one, often rule of naturalistic literature is that man's
satirical, combining a belief in the poten- destiny is man, i.e. other humans.' On the
tialities of reason with methodical doubt contrary, in non-naturalistic, metaphysi-
in the most significant cases. The kinship cal literary genres discussed above, cir-
of this cognitive critique with the philo- cumstances around the hero are neither
sophical basis of modern science is evi- passive nor neutral. The fairy-tale world
dent. is oriented positively toward its pro-
tagonist. A fairy-tale is defined by
the hero's triumph: magic weapons
Science Fiction as a Literary Genre
and helpers are, with necessary nar-
(Functions and Models) rative retardations, at his beck and call.
As a full-fledged literary genre, SF has Inversely, the world of the tragic myth
its own repertory of functions, conven- is oriented negatively toward its protag-
tions and devices. Many of them are onist. Oedipus, Attis or Christ are pre-
highly interesting and significant for lit- destined to empirical failure by the
erary theory and history, but their range nature of their world-but the failure is
can scarcely be discussed in a brief ap- then ethically exalted and put to religious
proach as it is properly the subject for a use. The fantasy-a derivation of the
book-length work. However, it might be tragic myth just as the fairy-tale derives
possible to sketch some determining pa- 71n cases such as some novels of Hardy and
rameters of the genre
plays by Ibsen, or some of the more doctrinaire
In a typology of literary genres for works of the historical school of Naturalism,
our cognitive age, one basic parameter where determinism strongly stresses circum-
stances at the expense of the main figures' ac-
would take into account the relationship
tivity, we have underneath a surface appear-
of the world(s) each genre presents and ance of "realism" obviously to do with an
the "zero world" of empirically verifiable approach to tragic myth using a shamefaced
motivation in an unbelieving age. As contrary to
properties around the author (this being Shakespeare and the Romantics, in this case
"zero" in the sense of a central reference ethics follow physics in a supposedly causal
chain (most often through biology). An analo-
point in a coordinate system, or of the
control group in an experiment). Let us gous approach to fairy-tale is to be found in,
say, the mimicry of "realism" found in the
call this empirical world naturalistic. In Hollywood happy-end movies.
378 COLLEGE ENGLISH

from the victorious hero myth-is defined ative potentialities of an approach not
by the hero's horrible helplessness: it can limited by a consuming concern with
be thought of as tragic mythemes with- empirical surfaces and relationships.
out metaphysical compensations. Thus, As a matter of historical record, SF
in the fairy-tale and the fantasy ethics has started from a pre-scientific or proto-
coincide with (positive or negative) scientific approach of debunking satire
physics, in the tragic myth they compen- and naive social critique, and moved
sate the physics, in the "optimistic" myth closer to the increasingly sophisticated
they supply the coincidence with a natural and human sciences. The natural
systematic framework. sciences caught up and surpassed the liter-
The world of a work of SF is not a ary imagination in the 19th century, the
priori intentionally oriented toward its sciences dealing with human relationships
protagonists, either positively or nega- might be argued to have caught up with
tively; the protagonists may succeed or it in their highest theoretical achieve-
fail in their objectives, but nothing in the ments but have certainly not done so in
basic contract with the reader, in the their alienated social practice. In the 20th
physical laws of their worlds, guar- century, SF has moved into the sphere
antees either. SF is thus (possibly with of anthropological and cosmological
the exception of some prefigurations in thought, becoming a diagnosis, a warn-
the pastoral) the only meta-empirical ing, a call to understanding and action,
genre which is not at the same time and-most important-a mapping of pos-
metaphysical; it shares with the dominant sible alternatives. This historical move-
literature of our civilization a mature ment of SF can be envisaged as an en-
approach analogous to that of modern richment of and shift from a basic direct
science and philosophy. Furthermore, it or extropolative model to an indirect or
shares the omnitemporal horizons of such analogic model.
an approach. The myth is located above The earlier dominant model of SF
time, the fairy-tale in a conventional from the 19th century on (though not
grammatical past which is really outside necessarily in preceding epochs) was one
time, and the fantasy in the hero's ab- which started from certain cognitive hy-
normally disturbed present. The natural- potheses and ideas incarnated in the fic-
istic literary mainstream and SF can tional framework and nucleus of the
range through all times: empirical ones fable. This extrapolative model-e.g., of
in the first, non-empirical ones in the London's Iron Heel, Wells' The Sleeper
latter case. The naturalistic mainstream Wakes and Men Like Gods, Zamiatin's
concentrates on the present, but it can We, Stapledon'sLastand First Men, Pohl
deal with the historical past, and even and Kornbluth's Space Merchants, or
to some degree with the future in the Yefremov's Andromeda-is based on
form of hopes, fears, premonitions, direct, temporal extrapolation and cen-
dreams, et sim. SF concentrates on pos- tered on sociological (i.e., utopian and
sible futures and their spatial equivalents, anti-utopian) modelling. This is where
but it can deal with the present and the the great majority of the "new maps of
past as special cases of a possible historical hell" belongs for which postwar SF is
sequence seen from an estranged point justly famous, in all its manifold com-
of view (by a figure from another time binations of socio-technological scientific
and/or space). SF can thus use the cre- cognition and social oppression (global
On the Poeticsof the ScienceFiction Genre 379

catastrophes, cybernetics,dictatorships). treated as a prophet: neither enthroned


Yet alreadyin Wells'TimeMachineand when apparently successful, nor be-
in Stapledon,this extrapolationtran- headed when apparently unsuccessful.
scendedthe sociologicalspectrum(from As Plato found out in the court of Di-
everydaypracticethrougheconomicsto onysus and Hythloday at cardinalMor-
erotics)andspilledintobiologyandcos- ton's, SF figures better devote them-
mology.Nonetheless,whateverits osten- selves to their own literary republics,
siblelocation(future,"fourthdimension", which, to be sure,lead back-but in their
other planets,alternateuniverses),"ex- own way--to the Republic of Man. SF
trapolativemodelling"is orientedfutur- is finally concernedwith the tensionsbe-
ologically.Its valuesand standardsare tween Civitas Dei and Civitas Terrena,
to be foundin thecognitiveimportof the and it cannot be uncriticallycommitted
fable'spremisesandthe consistencywith to any mundaneCity.
whichsuchpremises(usuallyoneorvery The analogic model in SF is based on
few in number)arenarratively developed analogy rather than extrapolation. Its
to its logicalend,to a cognitivelysignifi- figuresmay but do not haveto be anthro-
cant conclusion. pomorphic or its localities geomorphic.
SF can thusbe usedas a hand-maiden The objects,figures,andup to a point the
of futurologicalforesightin technology, relationshipsfrom which this indirectly
ecology, sociology, etc. Whereasthis modelledworld startscan be quite fantas-
may be a legitimatesecondaryfunction tic (in the sense of empiricallyunverifi-
thegenrecanbe madeto bear,anyobliv- able) as long as they are logically, philo-
ion of its strict secondariness may lead sophicallyandmutuallyconsistent.Again,
to confusionand indeeddanger.Onto- as in all distinctions of this essay, one
logically,art is not pragmatictruthnor should think of a continuum at whose
fiction fact. To expect from SF more extremesthere is pure extrapolationand
thana stimulusfor independent thinking, analogy, and of two fields grouped
morethana systemof stylizednarrative around the poles and shading into each
devicesunderstandable only in theirmu- other on a wide front in the middle.
tualrelationships withina fictionalwhole The lowest form of analogicmodelling
and not as isolatedrealities,leadsinsen- goes back to a region where distinction
siblyto criticaldemandfor andof scien- between a crude analogyand an extrapo-
tific accuracyin the extrapolated realia. lation backwardsare not yet distinguish-
Editorsandpublishers of such"hard" per- able: it is the analogyto Earthpast,from
suasionhave,from the U.S. pulp maga- geological through biological to ethno-
zines to the Soviet agitprop,been in- logical and historical.The worlds more
clinedto turnthe handmaiden of SF into or less openly modelledon the Carbonif-
the slavey of the reigningtheology of erous Age, on tribal prehistory,on bar-
the day (technocratic,psionic,utopian, baricandfeudalempires-in fact modelled
catastrophic, or whatever).Yet thisfun- on handbooksof geology and anthropol-
damentally subversive genrelanguishes in ogy, on Spenglerand The Three Muske-
strait-jackets more quickly than most teers-are unfortunatelyabundantin the
otherones,respondingwith atrophy,es- foothillsof SF. Some of them may be use-
capism,or both. Laying no claim to ful adolescentleisurereading,which one
prophecies except for its statisticallyto should not begrudge;however, their un-
be expected share, SF should not be easy coexistence with a supersciencein
380 COLLEGE
ENGLISH

the story framework or around the pro- The indirect models of SF fall, how-
tagonist, which is to
supposed provide an ever, still clearly within its cognitive
SF alibi, brings them close to or over the horizons insofar as their conclusions or
brink of minimum cognitive standards re- import is concerned. The cognition
quired. The Burroughs-to-Asimov space- gained may not be immediately applica-
opera, cropping up in almost all U.S. ble, it may be simply the enabling of the
writers right down to Samuel Delany be- mind to receive new wavelengths, but it
longs here, i.e., into the uneasy border- eventually contributes to the understand-
line between inferior SF and non-SF ing of the most mundane matters. This is
(forms mimicking SF scenery but model- testified by the works of Kafka and Lem,
led on the structures of the Western and of Karel Capek and Anatole France, as
other avatars of fairy-tale and fantasy). well as of the best of Wells and the "SF
The highest form of analogic modelling reservation" writers.
would be the analogy to a mathematical
model, such as the fairly primary one ex- For a Poetics of Science Fiction
plicated in Abbott's Flatland, as well as (Summation and Anticipation)
the ontological analogies found in a com-
pressed overview form in some stories by The above sketch should, no doubt, be
Borges and the Polish writer Lem, and in supplemented by a sociological analysis of
a somewhat more humane narration with the "inner environment" of SF, exiled
a suffering protagonist in some stories by since the beginning of 20th century into
Kafka (The Metamorphosis or In the a reservation or ghetto which was pro-
Penal Colony) and novels by Lem tective and is now constrictive, cutting
(Solaris). Such highly sophisticated philo- off new developments from healthy com-
sophico-anthropological analogies are petition and the highest critical standards.
today perhaps the most significant region Such a sociological discussion would en-
of SF, indistinguishable in quality from able us to point out the important differ-
best mainstream writing. Situated be- ences between the highest reaches of the
tween Borges and the upper reaches into genre, glanced at in this essay in order to
which shade the best utopias, anti-satires define functions and standards of SF, and
and satires, this semantic field is a modern the 80% or more of debilitating confec-
variant of the conte philosophique of the tionery. Yet it should be stressed that, as
18th century. Similar to Swift, Voltaire, different from many other para-literary
or Diderot, these modern parables fuse genres, the criteria for the insufficiency
new visions of the world with an appli- of most SF is to be found in the genre
cability-usually satirical and grotesque itself. This makes SF in principle, if not
-to the shortcomings of our workaday yet in practice, equivalent to any other
world. As different from the older "major" literary genre.
Rationalism, a modern parable must be If the whole above argumentation is
open-ended by analogy to modern cos- found acceptable, it will be possible to sup-
mology, epistemology, and philosophy of plement it also by a survey of forms and
science.8 sub-genres. Beside some which recur in
an updated form-such as the utopia and
8I have tried to analyze one such representa- fabulous voyage-the anticipation, the
tive work in my afterword to Lem's Solaris, the artificial
New York 1970, entitled "The Open-Ended superman story, intelligence
Parables of Stanislaw Lem and Solaris". story (robots, androids, etc.), time-travel,
On the Poetics of the Science Fiction Genre 381

catastrophe, the meeting with aliens, etc., Wells, and some general approaches to
would have to be analyzed. The various literature by people awake to method-
forms and sub-genres of SF could then ological interest, much spadework has
be checked for their relationships to been done.9 In the work of Lem (see note
other literary genres, to each other, and 1) we may even possess some corner-
to various sciences. For example, the stones for a needed critical home. If one
utopias are-whatever else they may be- may speculate on some fundamental fea-
clearly sociological fictions or social- tures or indeed axioms of such criticism,
science-fiction, whereas modern SF is the first might be the already mentioned
analogous to modern polycentric cosmol- one that the genre has to be evaluated
ogy, uniting time and space in Einsteinian proceeding from its heights down, apply-
worlds with different but co-variant di- ing the standards gained by the analysis
mensions and time scales. Significant mod- of its masterpieces. The second axiom
ern SF, with deeper and more lasting might be to demand of SF a level of
sources of enjoyment, also presupposes cognition higher than that of its average
more complex and wider cognitions: it reader: the strange novelty is its raison
discusses primarily the political, psycho- d'etre. As a minimum, we must demand
logical, anthropological use and effect of from SF that it be wiser from the world
sciences, and philosophy of science, and it speaks to.
the becoming or failure of new realities In other words, this is an educational
as a result of it. The consistency of ex- literature, hopefully less deadening than
trapolation, precision of analogy and most compulsory education in our split
width of reference in such a cognitive national and class societies, but irrever-
discussion turn into aesthetic factors. sibly shaped by the pathos of preaching
(That is why the "scientific novel" dis- the good word of human curiosity, fear,
cussed above is not felt as completely and hope. Significant SF (to which, as in
satisfactory-it is aesthetically poor be- all genres-but somewhat disappointingly
cause it is scientifically meager.) Once so-at least 95% of printed matter claim-
the elastic criteria of literary structuring ing the name does not belong) denies thus
have been met, a cognitive-in most cases the "two-cultures gap" more efficiently
strictly scientific-element becomes a than any other literary genre I know of.
measure of aesthetic quality, of the spe- Even more importantly, it demands from
cific pleasure to be sought in SF. In other the author and reader, teacher and critic,
words, the cognitive nucleus of the plot not merely specialized, quantified posi-
co-determines the fictional estrangement tivistic knowledge (scientia) but a social
in SF. This works on all literary levels: imagination whose quality, whose wis-
e.g., purely aesthetic, story-telling reasons dom (sapientia), testifies to the maturity
led modern SF to the cognitive assump- of his critical and creative thought.
tion of a hyperspace where flight speed
Selected Bibliography: Theory and
is not limited by the speed of light.
General Surveys of SF After Wells
Finally, it might be possible to sketch
the basic premises of a significant criti- Kingsley Amis, New Maps of Hell, New
York 1960.
cism, history and theory of this literary
genre. From Edgar Allan Poe to Damon 90n this continent, one ought to mention in
the first place Northrop Frye's Anatomy of
Knight, including some notable work on Criticism,New York 1966,and Angus Fletcher's
the older sub-genres from the utopia to Allegory, Ithaca, 1964.
382 COLLEGEENGLISH

"William Atheling Jr." (James Blish), The Mark R. Hillegas, The Future as Nightmare,
Issues at Hand, Chicago 1970. New York 1967.
, More Issues at Hand, Chi- Damon Knight, In Search of Wonder, Chi-
cago 1970. cago 1967.
James O. Bailey, Pilgrims Through Space and Hans-Jiirgen Krysmansky, Die utopische
Time, New York 1947. Methode, Kiln 1967.
Henri Baudin, La Science-fiction, Paris-Mon- Stanislaw Lem, Fantastyka i futurologia 1-11,
treal 1971. Cracow 1970.
Reginald Bretnor ed., Modern Science Fiction, Sam Moskowitz, Explorers of the Infinite,
New York 1953. Cleveland 1963.
Jean-JacquesBridenne, La littdraturefrancaise , Seekers of Tomorrow, New
d'imaginationscientifique,Paris 1950. York 1967.
Anatolii Britikov, Russkii sovetskii nauchno- Alexei Panshin, Heinlein in Dimension, Chi-
fantasticheskiiroman, Leningrad 1970. cago 1968.
RogerCaillois,Images,images..., Paris1966. Michael Pehlke and Norbert Lingfeld,
Thomas Claresoned., The Other Side of Real- Roboter und Gartenlaube,Munich 1970.
ism, Bowling Green, Ohio 1971. Martin Schwonke, Vom Staatsromanzur Sci-
I. F. Clarke, Voices Prophesying War 1763- ence Fiction, Stuttgart 1957.
1984, London-New York-Toronto 1966. Darko Suvin ed., Other Worlds, Other Seas,
Basil Davenport ed., The Science Fiction New York 1970.
Novel, Chicago 1964. Leon Trotsky, Literature and Revolution,
Richard Gerber, Utopian Fantasy, London Ann Arbor 1960 (ch. 6).
1955. Donald A. Wollheim, The Universe Makers,
Georgii Gurevich, Karta Strany Fantaziy, New York 1971.
Moscow 1967. The best available anthology is Robert Silver-
Ryszard Handke, Polska proza fantastyczno- berg ed., The Mirror of Infinity, San Francisco
naukowa, Wroclaw 1969. 1970, with critical introductions by various
handsto each story.

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