the big sky library of asian speculative fiction

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authors featured in the Big Sky Library

Science Fiction Studies, #115

Arthur B. Evans, Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr., Joan Gordon, Veronica Hollinger,

Rob Latham, Carol McGuirk, Sherryl Vint, eds.

<  November 2011

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 38, No. 3.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Mike Davis, Ward Moore’s Freedom Ride  //  Andrew Milner, Science Fiction and the Literary Field  //  Charles

Thorpe, Death of a Salesman: Petit-Bourgeois Dread in Philip K. Dick’s Mainstream Fiction  //  Theo Finigan, “Into the

Memory Hole”: Totalitarianism and Mal d’Archive in Nineteen Eighty-Four and The Handmaid’s Tale  //  Elissa Gurman,

“The holy and the powerful light that shines through history”: Tradition and Technology in Marge Piercy’s He, She and It

//  Charles Paulk, Post-National Cool: William Gibson’s Japan  //  Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr., Sound is the New Light:

Whittington’s Sound Design and Science Fiction  //  Carl Abbott, The Imagination of Disaster, Revisited: Page’s The

City’s End and Yablon’s Untimely Ruins  //  Jess Nevins, Defining Steampunk: Ashley’s Steampunk Prime,

Bowser/Croxall’s “Steampunk, Science, and (Neo)Victorian Technologies,” and VanderMeers’ Steampunk II  //  Jerome

Winter, Lab Coats, Not Straitjackets: Allen’s Master Mechanics and Wicked Wizards and Kirby’s Science, Scientists,

and Film

Academic journal: Science Fiction Studies

Editors (alphabetically listed): Marc Angenot  |  Christopher Bolton |  Istvan Csicsery-Ronay Jr.  |  Charles Elkins  |  

Arthur B. Evans  |  Neil Gerlach  |  Joan Gordon  |  Michael Griffin  |  Sheryl N. Hamilton  |  Veronica Hollinger  |  Rob Latham  |

Nicole Lobdell  |  Patrick McCarthy  |  Carol McGuirk  |  Aris Mounsoutzanis  |  R. D. Mullen  |  Robert M. Philmus  |  

Erik Simon  |  Darko Suvin  |  Lisa Swanstrom  |  Tatsumi Takayuki  |  Yugin Teo  |  Sherryl Vint  |  Yan Wu

Language: English

ISSN: 0091-7729

Issues: 1973 – present

Websites: Science Fiction Studies  |  ISFDB  |  SFE4

Bibliographic comments: Only issues with contents of interest to this library are listed here, highlighted in white or linked in

blue. This page: #101–150  |  #1–50  |  #51–100

Science Fiction Studies, #104

Arthur B. Evans, Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr., Joan Gordon, Veronica Hollinger,

Rob Latham, Carol McGuirk, eds.

<  March 2008

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 35, No. 1.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Everett F. Bleiler, Johann Valentin Andreae, Fantasist and Utopist  //  Andrew Milner, Robert Savage, Pulped

Dreams: Utopia and American Pulp Science Fiction  //  J. P. Telotte, Animating Space: Disney, Science, and

Empowerment  //  Jorge Martins Rosa, A Misreading Gone Too Far? Baudrillard Meets Philip K. Dick  //  Sean

Brayton, The Post-White Imaginary in Alex Proyas’s I, Robot  //  Susan Vanderborg, Gendering “Otherspace”: The

“Martian Ty/opography” of Johanna Drucker and Brad Freeman  //  David M. Higgins, SF and American Wests:

Turner’s Cultural Tropes of the American West and Abbott’s Science Fiction and the American West  //  Graham

Murphy, Infectious Negotiations of the Orient and Occident: Tatsumi’s Full Metal Apache  //  Aaron Parrett, Veins of

Symbolism and Strata of Meaning: Kolker’s Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey  //  Nicholas Ruddick, An

Unsuitable Memorial: Stover’s Edition of H.G. Wells’s Things to Come

Science Fiction Studies, #137

Unknown editors

<  March 2019

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 46, No. 1.

  •  Contains a special section on Liu Cixin.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Li Guangyi, Nathaniel Isaacson, China Turns Outward: On the Literary Significance of Liu Cixin’s Science

Fiction  //  Gwennaël Gaffric, Liu Cixin’s 'Three Body Trilogy' and the Status of Science Fiction in Contemporary China  

//  Stephen Dougherty, Liu Cixin, Arthur C. Clarke, and “Repositioning”  //  Val Nolan, Nostalgia for Infinity: Hard

Determinism and Hard Science in Alastair Reynolds’s 'Revelation Space' Sequence  //  Silvia G. Kurlat Ares, Argentine

Science Fiction: Between Everyday Politics and Dystopia  //  Hee-Jung Serenity Joo, Racial Impossibility and Critical

Failure in W.E.B. Du Bois’s Darkwater  //  Siobhan Carroll, Lost in Space: Surviving Globalization in Gravity and The

Martian  //  Vitor Bonifácio, A Singular Novel – Amaral’s 1886 Os habitantes do planeta Saturno [The Inhabitants of the

Planet Saturn]  //  E. Mariah Spencer, Margaret Cavendish’s 'Earth’s Complaint' and other SF Poems  //  Kumiko

Saito, Mapping Anime Scholarship in the Post-Genre Age: Bolton’s Interpreting Anime

Science Fiction Studies, #119

Yan Wu, Veronica Hollinger, eds.

<  March 2013

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 40, No. 1.

  •  Special edition on Chinese science fiction.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

  •  '"Great Wall Planet": Introducing Chinese Science Fiction' translated by Wang Pengfei with Ryan Nichols.

Essays: Yan Wu, "Great Wall Planet": Introducing Chinese Science Fiction  //  Han Song, Chinese Science Fiction: A

Response to Modernization  //  Liu Cixin, Beyond Narcissism: What Science Fiction Can Offer Literature  //  Nathaniel

Isaacson, Science Fiction for the Nation: Tales of the Moon Colony and the Birth of Modern Chinese Fiction  //  

Shaoling Ma, “A Tale of New Mr. Braggadocio”: Narrative Subjectivity and Brain Electricity in Late Qing Science Fiction  

//  Lisa Raphals, Alterity and Alien Contact in Lao She’s Martian Dystopia, Cat Country  //  Mingwei Song, Variations

on Utopia in Contemporary Chinese Science Fiction  //  Jia Liyuan, Gloomy China: China’s Image in Han Song’s

Science Fiction  //  Qian Jiang, Translation and the Development of Science Fiction in Twentieth-Century China  //  

Wei Yang, Voyage into an Unknown Future: A Genre Analysis of Chinese SF Film in the New Millennium

Science Fiction Studies, #116

Unknown editors

<  March 2012

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 39, No. 1.

  •  Introduction by Rob Latham.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Brooks Landon, That Light at the End of the Tunnel: The Plurality of Singularity  //  Neal Easterbrook,

Singularities  //  Rob Latham, From Outer to Inner Space: New Wave Science Fiction and the Singularity  //  Stephen

Dougherty, Embodiment and Technicity in Geoff Ryman’s Air  //  Everett Hamner, Remembering the Disappeared:

Science Fiction Film in Post-Dictatorship Argentina  //  Steffen Hantke, A German Hero for the Cold War: Wolfgang F.

Henschel’s Alpha Alpha (1972)  //  Christopher Palmer, Tracing and Complicating the Dickian Networks: Rossi’s The

Twisted Worlds of Philip K. Dick and Rickels’s I Think I Am: Philip K. Dick  //  Umberto Rossi, A Sort of Homecoming:

Fortin’s Philip K. Dick and the Spectacle of Home

Science Fiction Studies, #117

Unknown editors

<  July 2012

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 39, No. 2.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Elana Gomel, Posthuman Voices: Alien Infestation and the Poetics of Subjectivity  //  Thomas M. Barrett,

Heart of a Serpent? The Cold War Science Fiction of Murray Leinster  //  Carl Abbott, Rocky Mountain Refuge:

Constructing “Colorado” in Science Fiction  //  Umberto Rossi, The Shunts in the Tale: The Narrative Architecture of

Philip K. Dick’s VALIS  //  Amanda Thibodeau, Alien Bodies and a Queer Future: Sexual Revision in Octavia Butler’s

“Bloodchild” and James Tiptree, Jr.’s “With Delicate Mad Hands”  //  Andrew Hageman, The Challenge of Imagining

Ecological Futures: Paolo Bacigalupi’s The Windup Girl  //  Mark Bould, From Llanvihangel Crucorney and Zagreb to

the Stars!: Milner’s Raymond Williams on SF, Utopias, and Dystopias and Suvin’s Essays on Utopia, SF, and Political

Epistemology  //  Brooks Landon, Reading the Red Planet: Crossley’s Imagining Mars and Hendrix/Slusser/Rabkin’s

Visions of Mars  //  Patrick A. McCarthy, Two Briefs on Science Fiction: Bould/Vint’s The Routledge Concise History of

Science Fiction and Seed’s Science Fiction: A Very Short Introduction

Science Fiction Studies, #118

David Higgins, Rob Latham, eds.

<  November 2012

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 39, No. 3

  •  Introduction by David Higgins.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Roger Luckhurst, Laboratories for Global Space-Time: Science-Fictionality and the World’s Fairs, 1851-1939  

//  Sherryl Vint, Orange County: Global Networks in Tropic of Orange  //  Lysa Rivera, Future Histories and Cyborg

Labor: Reading Borderlands Science Fiction after NAFTA  //  Diane Nelson, Pirates, Robbers, and Mayan Shamans:

The Terrible and Fine Allure of the Spirits of Capital  //  Jerome Winter, Epistemic Polyverses and the Subaltern: The

Postcolonial World-System in Ian McDonald’s Evolution’s Shore and River of Gods  //  Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr.,

What Do We Mean When We Say “Global Science Fiction”? Reflections on a New Nexus  //  Gerry Canavan,

Decolonizing the Future: Langer’s Postcolonialism and Science Fiction and Hoagland/Sarwal’s Science Fiction

Imperialism and the Third World  //  Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr., Of Enigmas and Xenoencyclopedias: Saint-Gelais’s

Modernités de la science-fiction and Langlet’s La science-fiction: Lecture et poétique d’un genre littéraire  //  Terry

Harpold, Other Kingdoms: Chatelain/Slusser’s Three Science Fiction Novellas by J.-H.Rosny aîné and Stableford’s

The Navigators of Space and Other Alien Encounters by J.-H. Rosny aîné

Science Fiction Studies, #122

Unknown editors

<  March 2014

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 41, No. 1.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Brian J. McAllister, “You’ll remember Mercury”: The Avant-Garde Worlds of Edwin Morgan’s SF Poetry  //  

George M. Johnson, Evil is in the Eye of the Beholder: Threatening Children in Two Edwardian Speculative Satire  //  

Andrew Lison, “The very idea of place”: Form, Contingency, and Adornian Volition in The Man in the High Castle  //  

Carl Gutiérrez-Jones, Stealing Kinship: Neuromancer and Artificial Intelligence  //  Nicholas Serruys, Revisiting and

Revising History through Subjectivity in Élisabeth Vonarburg’s Bridge Cycle  //  Sean McQueen, Biocapitalism and

Schizophrenia: Rethinking the Frankenstein Barrier  //  Aaron Santesso, Fascism and Science Fiction  //  Ewa

Mazierska, Eva Näripea, Gender Discourse in Eastern European SF Cinema  //  Andrew Ferguson, Unearthing the

Shaver Mysteries: Nadis’s Ray Palmer’s Amazing Pulp Journey and Toronto’s Richard Shaver, Ray Palmer and the

Strangest Chapter of 1940s Science Fiction  //  Wendy Gay Pearson, Sex-as-Discourse vs. Sex-as-Practice: Ginn and

Cornelius’s Essays on the Carnal Side of Science Fiction  //  Jaymee Goh Sook Yi, Steaming into the Retro-Future:

Taddeo and Miller’s A Steampunk Anthology

Science Fiction Studies, #123

Unknown editors

<  July 2014

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 41, No. 2.

  •  Introduction by Rob Latham.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Mark Bould, Of Eight Oscillations and Several Messages Carved in Flesh: Spectacle, Spectatorship,

Cognition, and Affect in Dredd and Looper  //  Vivian Sobchack, Sci-Why? On the Decline of a Film Genre in an Age of

Technological Wizardry  //  Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, The Eye of Gort  //  Amy J. Ransom, The First Last Man: Cousin

de Grainville’s Le Dernier homme  //  Justin Prystash, Sexual Futures: Feminism and Speculative Fiction in the Fin de

Siècle  //  Adam Głaz, Rorschach, We Have a Problem! The Linguistics of First Contact in Watts’s Blindsight and Lem’s

His Master’s Voice  //  James Pulizzi, Language After Humans: On the Disembodied Language of Joseph McElroy’s

Plus  //  Jacob Emery, A Clone Playing Craps Will Never Abolish Chance: Randomness and Fatality in Vladimir

Sorokin’s Clone Fictions  //  Jerome Winter, All Hail the Slide-Rule? Clareson/Sanders’s The Heritage of Heinlein,

Herbe’s Characters in New British Hard Science Fiction, and Slusser’s Gregory Benford

Science Fiction Studies, #127

Unknown editors

<  November 2015

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 42, No. 3.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: J.P. Telotte, Animation, Modernism, and the Science Fiction Imagination  // Adam Stock, The Blind Logic of

Plants: Enlightenment and Evolution in John Wyndham’s The Day of the Triffids  //  Słavomir Kozioł, “Those Clunky

Things You Have to Carry Around”: Textual Materiality in Vernor Vinge’s Rainbows End  //  Chuck Robinson, Minority

and Becoming-Minor in Octavia Butler’s Fledgling  //  Scott Selisker, “Stutter-Stop Flash-Bulb Strange”: GMOs and the

Aesthetics of Scale in Paolo Bacigalupi’s The Windup Girl  //  Hua Li, The Political Imagination in Liu Cixin’s Critical

Utopia: China 2185  //  Ian Campbell, Prefiguring Egypt’s Arab Spring: Allegory and Allusion in Amad Khālid Tawfīq’s

Utopia  //  Arthur B. Evans, Culminating a Decade of Scholarship on Jules Verne: Noiset’s New Translation of The

Self-Propelled Island, Taves’s Hollywood Presents Jules Verne, and Butcher’s Jules Verne inédit: les manuscrits

déchiffrés  //  John Rieder, Utopia, SF, and the Ideology of Form: Moylan’s Demand the Impossible (2nd ed.), Tally

Jr.’s Utopia in the Age of Globalization, and Wegner’s Essays on Science Fiction, Globalization, and Utopia  //  David

M. Higgins, The Cutting Edges of SF Scholarship: Bould/Williams’s SF Now

Science Fiction Studies, #129

Unknown editors

<  July 2016

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 43, No. 2.

  •  Introduction by Rob Latham.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Arthur B. Evans, Anachronism in Early French Futuristic Fiction  //  Rachel Haywood Ferreira, How Latin

America Saved the World and Other Forgotten Futures  //  Paweł Frelik, Gazing Back in Wonder: Visual Megatexts and

Forgotten Ocularies in Science Fiction  //  Patrick Whitmarsh, “Imagine You’re a Machine”: Narrative Systems in Peter

Watts’s Blindsight and Echopraxia  //  Andrew Rose, The Unknowable Now: Passionate Science and Transformative

Politics in Kim Stanley Robinson’s Science in the Capital Trilogy  //  Paul Mountfort, The I Ching and Philip K. Dick’s

The Man in the High Castle  //  Gerry Canavan, “A Dread Mystery, Compelling Adoration”: Olaf Stapledon, Star Maker,

and Totality  //  Cameron Awkward-Rich, The Fiction of Ethnography in Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s Herland  //  Arthur

B. Evans, Surrealism and Science Fiction: Parkinson’s Futures of Surrealism and Surrealism, Science Fiction and

Comics  //  David Higgins, Coming to Terms with SF: Latham’s The Oxford Handbook of Science Fiction  //  Rob

Latham, Weaponizing the Imagination: Colignon’s Rocket States, Fanning’s Death Rays and the Popular Media,

Case’s Calling Dr. Strangelove, Edwards’s The Atomic Bomb in Japanese Cinema, Oramus’s Grave New World, and

McGrath’s Deep Ends

Science Fiction Studies, #130

Joan Gordon, ed.

<  November 2016

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 43, No. 3.

  •  Only essays and the interview are listed here.

Essays: Bodhisattva Chattopadhyay, On the Mythologerm: Kalpavigyan and the Question of Imperial Science  //  

Anwesha Maity, Estrangement, History, and Aesthetic Relish: A Reading of Premendra Mitra’s Manu Dwadosh  //  

Sami Ahmad Khan, The Others in India’s Other Futures  //  Suparno Banerjee, Crossing the Border: The Depiction of

India in Ian McDonald’s River of Gods and Cyberabad Days  //  Eric D. Smith, Universal Love and Planetary Ontology

in Vandana Singh’s Of Love and Other Monsters  //  Veronica Hollinger, “Some Real Mothers ...”: Revised edition of

Bammer’s Feminism and Utopianism in the 1970  //  Amy Ransom, Playing Dice with the Universe: Meillassoux’s After

Finitude, The Number and the Siren, and Science Fiction and Extro-Science Fiction  //  Sherryl Vint, Possibilities for a

Science-Fiction Cinema: Bould’s Solaris, Butler’s Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Conolly’s The Thing,

Forshaw’s The War of the Worlds, Kermode’s Silent Running, Krämer’s Dr. Strangelove, Le Blanc/Odell’s Akira,

Luckhurst’s Alien, McAuley’s Brazil, Newman’s Quatermass and the Pit, and Wilson’s They Live

Interview: Malisa Kurtz, “Alternate Cuts”: Interview with Vandana Singh

Science Fiction Studies, #133

Joan Gordon, ed.

<  November 2017

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 44, No. 3.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Jeremy Withers, Bicycles Across the Galaxy: Attacking Automobility in 1950s Science Fiction  //  Connor

Pitetti, Uses of the End of the World: Apocalypse and Postapocalypse as Narrative Modes  //  Valentina Fulginiti,

Degenerate Utopias: Two Dystopian Rewritings of Disneyland in Early Twenty-first-century Italian Fiction  //  Joy

Sanchez-Taylor,  Fledgling, Symbiosis, and the Nature/Culture Divide  //  Lisa Dowdall, Treasured Strangers: Race,

Biopolitics, and the Human in Octavia E. Butler’s Xenogenesis Series  //  J. P. Telotte, Hollywood on the Moon:

“Scientifilm,” the Pulps, and the SF Imagination  //  Duy Lap Nguyen, Alternative Histories of Korean National

Sovereignty in 2009: Lost Memories  //  Amadine H. Faucheux, Race and Sexuality in Nalo Hopkinson’s Oeuvre; or,

Queer Afrofuturism  //  Stephen R. Dougherty, Adam Roberts, Reader’s Writer: Callow/ McFarlane’s Adam Roberts:

Critical Essays  //  Tamara C. Ho, Articulating Asia in SF: Roh/Huang/Niu’s Techno-Orientalism: Imagining Asia in

Speculative Fiction, History, and Media  //  Brooks Landon, Doubling Down on Double Vision: Telotte/ Duchovnay’s

Science Fiction Double Feature: The Science Fiction Film as Cult Text

Science Fiction Studies, #134

Joan Gordon, ed.

<  March 2018

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 45, No. 1.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Jeremy Withers, Bicycles Across the Galaxy: Attacking Automobility in 1950s Science Fiction  //  Connor

Pitetti, Uses of the End of the World: Apocalypse and Postapocalypse as Narrative Modes  //  Valentina Fulginiti,

Degenerate Utopias: Two Dystopian Rewritings of Disneyland in Early Twenty-first-century Italian Fiction  //  Joy

Sanchez-Taylor,  Fledgling, Symbiosis, and the Nature/Culture Divide  //  Lisa Dowdall, Treasured Strangers: Race,

Biopolitics, and the Human in Octavia E. Butler’s Xenogenesis Series  //  J. P. Telotte, Hollywood on the Moon:

“Scientifilm,” the Pulps, and the SF Imagination  //  Duy Lap Nguyen, Alternative Histories of Korean National

Sovereignty in 2009: Lost Memories  //  Amadine H. Faucheux, Race and Sexuality in Nalo Hopkinson’s Oeuvre; or,

Queer Afrofuturism  //  Stephen R. Dougherty, Adam Roberts, Reader’s Writer: Callow/ McFarlane’s Adam Roberts:

Critical Essays  //  Tamara C. Ho, Articulating Asia in SF: Roh/Huang/Niu’s Techno-Orientalism: Imagining Asia in

Speculative Fiction, History, and Media  //  Brooks Landon, Doubling Down on Double Vision: Telotte/ Duchovnay’s

Science Fiction Double Feature: The Science Fiction Film as Cult Text

Science Fiction Studies, #135

Michael Griffin, Nicole Lobdell, eds.

<  July 2018

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 45, No. 2.

  •  Introduction 'Mary Shelley's Frankenstein at 200' by Michael Griffin and Nicole Lobdell.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Jed Mayer, The Weird Ecologies of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein  //  Shannon N. Conley, An Age of

Frankenstein: Monstrous Motifs, Imaginative Capacities, and Assisted Reproductive Technologies  //  Jolene

Zigarovich, The Trans Legacy of Frankenstein  //  Sinéad Murphy, Frankenstein in Baghdad: Human Conditions, or

Conditions of Being Human  //  Despina Kakoudaki, Unmaking People: The Politics of Negation in Frankenstein and

Ex Machina  //  Daniel Panka, Transparent Subjects: Digital Identity in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein and Charlie

Brooker’s "Be Right Back"  //  J. Stephen Addcox, The Frankenstein Family Tree: Friedman/Kavey’s A History of

Frankenstein Narratives and Frayling’s Frankenstein: The First Two Hundred Years  //  Marcin Wołk, Stanisław Lem,

Holocaust Survivor: Gajewska’s The Past in Lem’s Fiction and Orliński’s Lem, Life from Another Planet

Science Fiction Studies, #136

Brent Ryan Bellamy, Veronica Hollinger, eds.

<  November 2018

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 45, No. 3.

  •  Introduction by Brent Ryan Bellamy.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Steve Asselin, A Climate of Competition: Climate Change as Political Economy in Speculative Fiction,

1889-1915  //  Anindita Banerjee, Atoms, Aliens, and Compound Crises: Central Asia’s Nuclear Fantastic  //  Michael

Gaffney, The Ice Age and Us: Imagining Geohistory in Kim Stanley Robinson’s Shaman  //  Rebecca Evans,

Nomenclature, Narrative, and Novum: "The Anthropocene" and/as Science Fiction  //  Chris Pak, Terraforming and

Geoengineering in Luna: New Moon, 2312, and Aurora  //  Brent Ryan Bellamy, Sean O’Brien, Solar Accumulation:

The Worlds-Systems Theory of The Expanse  //  Allison Mackey, Guilty Speculations: The Affective Climate of Global

Anthropocene Fictions  //  Hua Li, "Are We, People from the Earth, so Terrible?": An  Atmospheric Crisis in Zheng

Wenguang’s Descendant of Mars  //  Guy Witzel, Abcanny Waters: Victor LaValle, John Langan, and the Weird Horror

of Climate Change  //  Terry Harpold, "À la Hogarth": Verne’s Robur the Conqueror

Science Fiction Studies, #138

Unknown editors

<  July 2019

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 46, No. 2.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Timothy S. Murphy, Labor of the Weird: William Hope Hodgson’s Fantastic Materialism  //  David L. Pike,

China Miéville’s Fantastic Slums and the Urban Abcanny  //  Dustin Crowley, Cosmos and Polis: Space and Place in

Nnedi Okorafor’s SF  //  Mengtian Sun, Imagining Globalization in Paolo Bacigalupi’s The Windup Girl and Chen

Qiufan’s The Waste Tide  //  Gabriel Mamola, Opus Dei: The Divine Invasion and the Philip K. Dick Canon  //  Phillip

Smith, The American Yeoman in Andy Weir’s The Martian  //  Phoenix Alexander, Octavia E. Butler and Black

Women’s Archives at the End of the World  //  Peter Paik, The Self Without Interest: The Return of Sacrifice in The

Leftovers  //  Caroline Edwards, The Palimpsestic Timetables of Russian SF: Banerjee’s Russian Science Fiction

Literature and Cinema  //  Stephen Dougherty, History in a Minor Key: Carver’s Alternative Histories and

Nineteenth-Century Literature

Science Fiction Studies, #139

Unknown editors

<  November 2019

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 46, No. 3.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Jennifer Rhee, Finance Speculation, Indeterminacy, and Unforeclosed Futures in James Tiptree, Jr.’s

"The Girl Who Was Plugged In"  //  Elizabeth Stainforth, Jo Lindsay Walton, Computing Utopia: The Horizons of

Computational Economies in History and SF  //  Raino Isto, In the Valley of the Time Tombs: Monumentality,

Temporality, and History in SF  //  Cara Healey, Madmen and Iron Houses: Lu Xun, Information Degradation, and

Generic Hybridity in Contemporary Chinese SF  //  Robert Looby, The Control of English Language SF in People’s

Poland  //  Wenwen Guo, Semper Shame: Reading Octavia Butler’s Kindred and Fledgling  //  Marc Acherman,

Screening Prophetic Machines: Preemption, Minority Report, and the Problem of Multiple Endings  //  Isiah

Lavender III, Dat Black Girl Magic! Mafe’s Where No Black Woman Has Gone Before and Schalk’s (Dis)ability, Race,

and Gender in Black Women’s Speculative Fiction

Science Fiction Studies, #140

Unknown editors

<  March 2020

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 47, No. 1.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Michael Nicholson, A Singular Experiment: Frankenstein’s Creature and the Nature of Scientific Inquiry  //  

J.P. Telotte, Pondering the “Pulp Paradox”: Pal, Paramount, and the SF Pulps  //  Jaak Tomberg, Morality and

Amorality in Ba(udri)llard’s Crash: A Poetic Perspective  //  Sunyoung Ahn, The Everyday Life of Artificial Intelligence:

The Humanism of Ted Chiang’s The Lifecycle of Software Objects  //  Paul Scott, From Contagion to Cogitation: The

Evolving Television Zombie  //  Patrick A. McCarthy, Reading Dystopian Novels in the Trump Era: Horan’s Desire and

Empathy in Twentieth-Century Dystopian Fiction and Han/Triplett/Anthony’s Worlds Gone Awry

Science Fiction Studies, #146

Unknown editors

<  March 2022

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$25.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 49, No. 1.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Stefania Forlini, Periodical Speculations: Early "Science Fiction" and Popular Victorian Weeklies  //  Todd M.

Thompson, Religion, Violence, and Apocalypse in H. G. Wells  //  Stefan Würrer, A Short History of Ambivalence

Toward the Feminist Utopia in Japanese Science Fiction  //  Lorenzo Andolfatto, Han Song’s A Guide to Hunting

Beautiful Women' and the Restricted Horizon of Chinese SF  //  Lyu Guangzhao, Demise of the False Utopia: China’s

Post-socialist Transition in Han Song’s Red Star Over America  //  Jerry Rafiki Jenkins, Katie Sciurba, Body

Knowledge, Reproductive Anxiety, and “Paying the Rent” in Octavia E. Butler’s Bloodchild  //  Jo Alyson Parker, Ted

Chiang’s Time-Travel Narratives: Predetermination, Predictability, and Free Will  //  Elana Gomel, Memory of the

Present: Hanson’s Memory and Utopian Agency in Utopian/Dystopian Literature  // Ian Campbell, UFO Cults Are a

Universal Language: Determann’s Islam, Science Fiction and Extraterrestrial Life

Science Fiction Studies, #142

Unknown editors

<  November 2020

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$20.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 47, No. 3.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Uncredited, SFS Symposium: Thinking Through the Pandemic  //  Rob Browning, Nietzsche Among the

Aliens in Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey  //  Moira Marquis, The Alien Within: Divergent Futures in Nnedi Okorafor’s

Lagoon and Neill Blomkamp’s District 9  //  Jessica Valisa, To the Stars! Space Exploration and Futuristic Visions in

Late Soviet Science Books for Children  //  Jesse S. Cohn, The Fantastic from Counterpublic to Public Imaginary: The

Darkest Timeline?  //  Ayanni C .H. Cooper, The Children Are (In) The Future: Castro/Clark’s Child and Youth Agency

in Science Fiction: Travel, Technology, Time

Science Fiction Studies, #143

Aris Mounsoutzanis, Yugin Teo, eds.

<  March 2021

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$25.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 48, No. 1.

  •  Special edition on SF and Nostalgia.

  •  Introduction 'Nostalgia Science Fiction at 2020' by Aris Mounsoutzanis and Yugin Teo.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Natalia Tobin, “Tomorrow’ll Be Yesterday Too Soon”: Speculative Nostalgia in Jack Womack’s Elvissey  //  

Paula Barba Guerrero, Post-Apocalyptic Memory Sites: Damaged Space, Nostalgia, and Refuge in Octavia Butler’s

Parable of the Sower  //  Robbie McAllister, Twenty Thousand Leagues East: Around the World with Nadia: The

Secret of Blue Water  //  Asami Nakamura, On the Uses of Nostalgia in Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go  //  María

José Gámez Fuentes, Rebeca Maseda García, Nostalgia and the Dialectics of Contemporary Feminisms in The

Handmaid’s Tale  //  Claire Gullander-Drolet, Imperialist Nostalgia and Untranslatable Affect in Ling Ma’s Severance  //  

Matthias Stephan, Nostalgic Narrative and Affective Climate SF in George Turner’s The Sea and Summer  //  Nat

Muller, Lunar Dreams: Space Travel, Nostalgia, and Retro-futurism in A Space Exodus and The Lebanese Rocket

Society  //  Carol McGuirk, A Long View of Genre History: Canavan/Link’s The Cambridge History of Science Fiction

Science Fiction Studies, #145

Unknown editors

<  November 2021

SFS Publications / SF-TH Inc.

$25.00

Notes:

  •  Vol. 48, No. 3.

  •  Only essays are listed here.

Essays: Michal Daliot-Bul, Voyage to Innumerable Star Worlds: A Nineteenth-Century Japanese SF Novel  //  Tyler

Austin Harper, “The Pitiless Judgement of Time”: Human Extinction in the Evolutionary Tragedies of H. G. Wells  //  

Kara Kennedy, Spice and Ecology in Herbert’s Dune: Altering the Mind and the Planet  //  Sara Hosey, Science Fiction,

Fictional Science, and the Legacy of Maternal Misrepresentations  //  Gregory Alan Phipps, Following Schrödinger’s

Cat into Many Worlds: Quantum Physics and Sleator’s The Last Universe  //  Myrriah M. Gómez, Toward a Chola

Consciousness: Examining Nuclear Colonialism in Lunar Braceros, 2125-2148  //  Jenna Campbell, Ecofeminist

Dialogic: Identity Continua in Kim Stanley Robinson’s Aurora  //  Liu Jian, Hua Li, On Chinese Science Fiction:

Selected Essays and Critical Pieces in English, 2015-2020  //  Tom Moylan, Good Days for Irish SF Studies: Howard’s

Space for Peace  //  Steven Shaviro, Unable to be Born: Vint’s After the Human