EBOOK

We Modern People
Science Fiction and the Making of Russian Modernity
Anindita BanerjeeSeries: Early Classics of Science Fiction(0)
About
Science fiction emerged in Russia considerably earlier than its English version and instantly became the hallmark of Russian modernity. We Modern People investigates why science fiction appeared here, on the margins of Europe, before the genre had even been named, and what it meant for people who lived under conditions that Leon Trotsky famously described as "combined and uneven development." Russian science fiction was embraced not only in literary circles and popular culture, but also by scientists, engineers, philosophers, and political visionaries. Anindita Banerjee explores the handful of well-known early practitioners, such as Briusov, Bogdanov, and Zamyatin, within a much larger continuum of new archival material comprised of journalism, scientific papers, popular science texts, advertisements, and independent manifestos on social transformation. In documenting the unusual relationship between Russian science fiction and Russian modernity, this book offers a new critical perspective on the relationship between science, technology, the fictional imagination, and the consciousness of being modern.
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Reviews
""This sophisticated and engaging study examines science fiction not so much as a literary genre but as a key focus for melding, evaluating, and interpreting the carious scientific and technological advances, philosophical notions, ideologies, and popular concerns that together constitute the world of Russian modernity.""
Barry P. Scherr
""Banerjee's book does much to challenge preconceptions about Russian science fiction and science in Russian culture more generally. In particular, it rightly cautions against the binary division of SF scenarios into 'utopias' and 'dystopias' or seeing early Russian SF through the prism of its post-war Soviet equivalent.""
Michael Froggatt
""Banerjee is eloquent on the Western cultural and scientific influences-including Albert Einstein, Thomas Edison, Georges Cuvier, Lord Kelvin, Friedrich Nietzsche and Henri Bergson, and not least the Lumière brothers and Georges Méliès- who informed this shift in consciousness. Banerjee's genuinely valuable contention is that science fiction unified the traditional discourse of Orthodox utopianis
Muireann Maguire