Mundane science fiction

Mundane Science Fiction is a sub-genre of science fiction, similar to hard science fiction, which is characterized by its setting on Earth or within the solar system, and a lack of interstellar travel or contact with aliens.

The Mundane SF movement, inspired by an idea of Julian Todd, was founded in 2002 during the Clarion workshop by novelist Geoff Ryman among others.[1] It focuses on stories set on or near the Earth, with a believable use of technology and science as it exists at the time the story is written.

The central ideas are:

Geoff Ryman has contrasted mundane science fiction with regular science fiction through the desire of teenagers to leave their parents' homes.[2] Ryman sees too much of regular science fiction being based on an "adolescent desire to run away from our world." However, Ryman notes that humans are not truly considered grown-up until they "create a new home of their own," which is what mundane science fiction aims to do.[2]

By 2007 the mundane science fiction movement was noteworthy enough that Interzone decided to devote an issue to the genre.[3]

The 2009 short story collection When It Changed: Science Into Fiction, edited by Ryman, is a collection of mundane science fiction stories, each written by a science fiction author with advice from a scientist, and with an endnote by that scientist explaining the plausibility of the story. [4]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Geoff Ryman: The Mundane Fantastic: Interview excerpts". Locus. January 2006. http://www.locusmag.com/2006/Issues/01Ryman.html. Retrieved 2007-09-23. 
  2. ^ a b "Take the Third Star on the Left and on til Morning" by Geoff Ryman, New York Review of Science Fiction, June 2007.
  3. ^ "Interzone Goes Mundane!". TTA Press. 26 April 2007. http://ttapress.com/47/interzone-goes-mundane/. Retrieved 2007-09-23. 
  4. ^ Material World, BBC Radio 4, 28 Oct 2009

External links