Philip Purser-Hallard
Philip Purser-Hallard (born 1971 as Philip Hallard) is an author and scholar whose interests in science fiction and religion have been expressed both in fiction and non-fiction.[1]
Purser-Hallard received his doctorate in English literature at Oxford University, during which time he was President and Society Poet of the Douglas Adams Society, and a founder member of a student comedy troupe called Cruel and Unusual Punishment.[2][3] His DPhil thesis, entitled 'The Relationship Between Creator and Creature in Science Fiction', examines how British and American science fiction of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries examine the relationship between humanity and a putative creating deity through stories about the creation of sentient individuals by scientists, working from Mary Shelley's Frankenstein through to recent authors like Bruce Sterling, William Gibson and Dan Simmons.[4][5] He also has interests in eschatological science fiction, as seen in his first novel, Of the City of the Saved....
Purser-Hallard has given three talks at the liberal Christian Greenbelt festival, all on the intersections of science fiction and religious themes: "Science Fiction as the Bible" and "The Bible as Science Fiction]" (2004), and "The Spirituality of Doctor Who" (2005).[6] Between 2006 and 2009 he wrote a regular column on science fiction and faith for Surefish, the ISP and webzine arm of Christian Aid. He publishes regular 140-character microfictions on Twitter, under the username trapphic.
Most of his published fiction to date has been set in shared universes with origins in Doctor Who licensed fiction. His brother Nick Hallard, an artist, provided unofficial illustrations for Purser-Hallard's Of the City of the Saved... web pages.
Bibliography
Novel
Novellas
Short fiction
- A Hundred Words from a Civil War in A Romance in Twelve Parts (Obverse Books 2011, edited by Lawrence Miles and Stuart Douglas).
- Battleship Anathema in Iris Wildthyme and the Celestial Omnibus (Obverse Books 2009, edited by Paul Magrs and Stuart Douglas).
- Future Relations (co-written with Nick Wallace) and five pieces under the umbrella title Perspectives in Collected Works (Big Finish Productions 2006, edited by Nick Wallace), a Bernice Summerfield anthology.
- The Ruins of Time in Short Trips: Time Signature (Big Finish Productions 2006, edited by Simon Guerrier), a Doctor Who anthology .
- The Long Midwinter in Short Trips: The History of Christmas (Big Finish Productions 2005, edited by Simon Guerrier), a Doctor Who anthology .
- Minions of the Moon in Wildthyme on Top (Big Finish Productions 2005, edited by Paul Magrs).
- Sex Secrets of the Robot Replicants in A Life Worth Living (Big Finish Productions 2004, edited by Guerrier), a Bernice Summerfield anthology. Sex Secrets of the Robot Replicants was reprinted as a prelude to the novel The Two Jasons by Dave Stone (Big Finish Productions 2007).
- Scapegoat in Emerge (Subway 2003, edited by Jane Campion and Jude Simpson), an anthology of poetry, prose and drama.
- Various entries in The Book of the War (Mad Norwegian Press 2002, edited by Lawrence Miles), an anthology in encyclopedia form belonging to the Faction Paradox series.
Criticism
- The Drugs Did Work, an article on Philip K. Dick, in The Guardian (12 August 2006).
- "Cybernetic godhead": the relationship between creator and creature in the science fiction of William Gibson, in the journal ManuScript (1999).
- A Momentary Stay Against Confusion, an interview with Dan Simmons (2003).
External links
Notes
Persondata |
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Purser-Hallard, Philip |
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Date of birth |
1971 |
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Date of death |
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