science fiction studies phd

Lisa Yaszek

Professor of Science Fiction Studies

science fiction studies phd

Lisa Yaszek is Professor of Science Fiction Studies in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication at Georgia Tech , where she researches and teaches science fiction as a global language crossing centuries, continents, and cultures. She is particularly interested in issues of gender, race, and science and technology in science fiction across media as well as the recovery of lost voices in science fiction history and the discovery of new voices from around the globe. Yaszek’s books include The Self-Wired: Technology and Subjectivity in Contemporary American Narrative (Routledge 2002/2014); Galactic Suburbia: Recovering Women’s Science Fiction (Ohio State, 2008); and Sisters of Tomorrow: The First Women of Science Fiction (Wesleyan 2016). Her ideas about science fiction as the premiere story form of modernity have been featured in The Washington Post , Food and Wine Magazine , and USA Today and in the AMC miniseries, James Cameron’s Story of Science Fiction . A past president of the Science Fiction Research Association , Yaszek currently serves as an editor for the Library of America and as a juror for the John W. Campbell and Eugie Foster Science Fiction Awards.

Science Fiction Research Association

Science Fiction Research Association

The oldest professional association dedicated to the scholarly inquiry of science fiction and the fantastic across all media, join fellow scholars, educators, librarians, editors, authors, publishers, archivists, and artists from across the globe in the sfra..

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Fantasy/Science Fiction

Faculty working in fantasy/science fiction.

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The Science of Science Fiction

Blend knowledge with wreativity to construct innovative science fiction stories.

One of the reasons the scientific community has made such incredible leaps and bounds is due to the impact that scientific fiction has had on motivating real-life scientific exploration and research. In this course, students will blend knowledge with creativity to construct rich, innovative science fiction stories. Throughout the course, students will explore how many classic science fiction works – from literature to film – found their beginnings in scientific thought. Then, using the craft elements of fiction writing, students will write their own science fiction stories and influence the scientific world!

What You Will Learn

Science fiction has had an impactful influence on the science world. Explore how many classic science fiction works found their beginnings in scientific thought.

  • Learn the history of science fiction
  • Focus on and apply the basic tools needed to practice and construct literary fiction
  • Understand the necessary marriage between imagination and hard fact

Note:   Upon successful enrollment of a section, students will receive a confirmation email from our Student Services team. This email will include a link to an authorization form that is required to be completed within 72-hours of enrollment.  In response to COVID-19 health guidelines, we have restructured our in-person Junior Academy workshops as online courses. Contact us at  [email protected]  if you have questions.

Course Number:  LIT-90021 Credit:  1.50 unit(s)

There are no sections of this course currently scheduled. Please contact the Pre-College Programs department at 858-534-0804 or [email protected] for information about when this course will be offered again.

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Science Fiction Studies

In this issue.

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  • Volume 48, Part 2, July 2021

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Science Fiction Studies is a refereed scholarly journal devoted to the study of the genre of science fiction, broadly defined. It publishes articles about science fiction and book reviews on science fiction criticism; it does not publish fiction. SFS is widely considered to be the premier academic journal in its field, with strong theoretical, historical, and international coverage. Roughly one-third of its issues to date have been special issues, with recent topics including Technoculture and Science Fiction, Afrofuturism, Latin American Science Fiction, and Animal Studies and Science Fiction. Founded in 1973, SFS is based at DePauw University and appears three times per year in March, July, and November.

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  • Front Matter
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0044

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  • Dorothy Scarborough. Supernatural Science
  • Arthur B. Evans
  • pp. 193-217
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0043
  • The Esoteric Roots of Science Fiction: Edward Bulwer-Lytton, H.G. Wells, and the Occlusion of Magic
  • Aren Roukema
  • pp. 218-242
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0035
  • The Ethics of Empire: H.G. Wells Re-Writing R.L. Stevenson
  • Tiziano De Marino
  • pp. 243-262
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0037
  • Prognostication and Precognition as Novums in Postwar SF
  • Alexander Kingsbury Smith
  • pp. 263-278
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0034
  • Simulations of Moksha: Liberation, Mysticism, and Transhumanism in Philip K. Dick’s Exegesis
  • Joshua DiCaglio
  • pp. 279-305
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0047
  • Messages from the Stars: 2001: A Space Odyssey and His Master’s Voice
  • Stephen Dougherty
  • pp. 306-331
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0048
  • Refabricating Individualism and Commodifying Anti-Capitalism: Melodramatic SF and VOD Spectatorship
  • Miguel Sebastián-Martín
  • pp. 332-353
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0040
  • Beyond Cyberpunk Culture
  • Chad Andrews
  • pp. 354-360
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0032
  • Estranging Art
  • Joel P.W. Letkemann
  • pp. 361-365
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0051
  • Opposites Attract
  • pp. 365-367
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0050
  • Ray Bradbury, “Ray Bradbury,” and “RAY BRADBURY”
  • Joe Sanders
  • pp. 367-368
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0042
  • Fictions of the Mind
  • Nathaniel Isaacson
  • pp. 369-372
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0038
  • Joan Gordon
  • pp. 373-375
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0041
  • “We Live in Dystopian Times”
  • Brittany Tomin
  • pp. 375-378
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0029
  • Shaping the Future
  • Graham J. Murphy
  • pp. 379-383
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0039
  • Sprocket Power
  • Rick Cousins
  • pp. 383-386
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0053
  • Books Received
  • pp. 387-388
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0036
  • “My Compliments to your Dressmaker”: The Past and Future of Wearable Tech
  • Lisa Swanstrom
  • pp. 389-394
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0049
  • Leslie F. Stone
  • Batya Weinbaum
  • pp. 394-395
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0033
  • Special Issue of Studies in Costume & Performance 7.2: “Costume and Fairy Tales”
  • Mayako Murai
  • pp. 395-396
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0045
  • Call for Undergraduate and Graduate Submissions: Journal of Fantasy and Fan Cultures
  • Journal of Fantasy and Fan Cultures
  • pp. 396-397
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0031
  • Popular Culture Review: General Call for Papers
  • Dr. Amy M. Green
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0054
  • Corpus Mundi : “I Recognize my Honey by the Walk”
  • Rastyam Tuktarovich Aliev
  • pp. 397-398
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0046
  • Notes on Contributors
  • pp. 399-400
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sfs.2021.0052

Previous Issue

Volume 48, Part 1, March 2021

Volume 48, Part 3, November 2021

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Anglia Ruskin Centre for Science Fiction & Fantasy

Home one: landing, the study of science fiction and fantasy is now over 75 years old. although historically it was focused in english departments, in the past twenty years this has changed and strong work is emerging in film, tv, art, and linguistics groups., the centre for science fiction and fantasy  connects several major strengths within anglia ruskin university –writing, publishing, linguistics alongside literary criticism–and places them within this wider interdisciplinary context. it is comprised of staff members, associate lecturers and postgraduate and undergraduate students along with other academics, authors, editors, and members of the book publishing industry., our aim is to explore science fiction and fantasy as products that depend on the interaction of literary and visual media and that are constructed by both the publishing industry and and fan communities., centre news.

  • How we became posthuman – Explorations of Cyberpunk and Biopunk: a presentation by Dr Lars Schmeink (March 16, 6pm, on campus)
  • Report on the Migration & Exile in SF conference with Keynote video

SF & substance abuse: ARU-linked film team making a connection

Current conferences, schedule & sign-up info for ‘the stars look very different today’: migration and exile in science fiction conference, cfp: migration and exile in science fiction (abstract deadline 19/4/21), our other projects include  samovar , a quarterly magazine of and about translated speculative fiction supported in part by the centre for science fiction and fantasy. we publish fiction and poetry in their original language and in english translation. we showcase the work both of writers and also translators, who we have to thank for opening doors to new worlds., >> find out more about samovar, on our ma in science fiction and fantasy, you’ll combine the literary theory of these two amazing genres with the study of their languages, their various forms and subgenres and their place in the publishing industry., a good children’s book stays with you for life. on our ma in children's literature, you'll study the key critical and business contexts of children’s literature and prepare for a lifelong career as a writer, teacher, publisher or scholar., want to find out more follow us on twitter at @csffanglia .

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About The Centre

Speculative Fictions and Cultures of Science

Stina Attebery received her PhD in English in 2020; her research focuses on science and technology studies, Indigenous studies, ecocriticism, and digital humanities. Her dissertation project, Refuse Ecologies: Indigenous Posthumanism in Polluted Futures , considered representations of extinction and climate change in Indigenous futurism. She has published articles in the journals Humanimalia , Extrapolation , and Medical Humanities . She served as a managing editor for the Eaton Journal of Archival Research in Science Fiction and as an editorial assistant for SAIL: Studies in American Indian Literatures . In addition, she was a Sawyer Fellow for the 2015-16 seminar on Alternative Futurisms and served as a co-coordinator for the STS Methods/Visiting Scholars Committee at UCR.

Lisa Brown Jaloza researches the increased fetishization of print and the theoretical as well as pedagogical implications as print and digital culture converge. Having previously drawn on the work of Gérard Genette to examine the ways in which a reader’s interpretation of a given work’s peritexts is affected dependent upon the specific medium through which the work is encountered (print, audiobook, e-book, etc), as well as the potential benefits to be derived from these media in a classroom setting, she planned to extend that line of inquiry beyond the functional shifts of peritexts to the derivation of textual meaning overall. While print is likely to remain the dominant form through which we engage in the study of literature, she hopes to challenge the hegemony of print and explore the marginalized position currently occupied by digital content despite its arguably more egalitarian avenues of access.

Miranda Butler received her PhD in English in 2020; she researches nineteenth-century scientific discourse, especially evolutionary biology, as it relates to Victorian visual cultures, media technologies, and nineteenth-century fiction. Her M.A. work on carte-de-visite photography won the Victorian Interdisciplinary Association of the Western United States’ best graduate student paper award, and her dissertation, Nineteenth-Century Sound Reading: Auditory Epistemologies in the Margins of Literature and Science , considered the relationship between nineteenth-century Morse code, phonographic shorthand, and biological/linguistic typology. Miranda also traces Victorian threads into contemporary science fiction film, television, and new media spheres; she has worked as a research assistant for the Eaton Collection’s fanzine project, and is a science fiction novelist and many-time winner of National Novel Writing Month.

Ezekial Crago received his PhD in English in 2019. His research is framed by his fascination with those writers and artists considered mavericks by both their contemporaries and posterity. His master’s thesis on the work of Orson Welles sought to respond to a sense that Welles’ work is largely misunderstood, underrepresented, and maligned. His dissertation, Omega Men: The Masculinist Discourse of Apocalyptic Manhood in Postwar American Cinema , focused on the reconstruction of masculinity in late 20th century sf film, and he is also interested in the social effects of ideology/mythology or dominant social narratives and the writers who work to interrogate and challenge the hypnotizing power of language and narrative.

Taylor Evans received his PhD in English in 2018. His research interests include American Literature (19th and 20th century), science fiction, science and technology studies, black studies, and performance studies. His dissertation, The Race of Machines: A Prehistory of the Human , examined the way that American technoculture theorizes race, looking to archival, popular, and canonical sources to argue that race and technology were parallel developments in the US. At the time of graduation, his work included chapters on racialized figures (Steam Men and servants) in proto-science fiction boys’ stories and dime novels, the early emergence of post-race ideology in pulp and paperback sf, and the development of a fugitive science fiction that contests the racialized legacy of American technoculture. His article "The Technology of Race: White Supremacy and Scientificition," for the Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts , examines the trope of technologized passing in early pulp SF and George Schuyler's novel Black No More , and he has a chapter entitled "Of Race and Robots" in Critical Insights: Isaac Asimov . He also served as an editor for the Eaton Journal of Archival Research in Science Fiction , and has reviews in or forthcoming from Science Fiction Studies , The Journal of Science Fiction Film and Television , Extrapolation , NYRSF , and American Literature .

Jaymee Goh Sook Yi graduated from Comparative Literature, focusing on critical race theory, postcolonialism, and science-fiction aesthetics. Her dissertation was an analysis of steampunk iconography, the affects they generate, and their reproduction in literary and performative cultural production, from the perspective of critical race theory. Jaymee has written for Tor.com and Jeff Vandermeer’s Ecstatic Days , and been published in Steampunk III: Steampunk Revolution , T he WisCon Chronicles , and Science Fiction Studies . A member of the Carl Brandon Society for diversity in SF/F, she has published short fiction and poetry in various venues such as Lightspeed Magazine , Strange Horizons , and Stone Telling . Her latest anthology, The Sea Is Ours: Tales of Steampunk Southeast Asia , co-edited with Singaporean writer Joyce Chng, was released in late 2015.

Kyle Harp-Rushing received his PhD in Anthropology with an emphasis in cultural and medical anthropology in 2020. He is interested in the co-productive relationships between emergent digital communication infrastructures and the technopolitics of “replicability crises” in the context of multiple Open Science movements. His ethnographic fieldwork with both nonprofit and for-profit Open Science advocates, developers and networks (mainly in the US), as well as with experimental lab scientists, engaged the contingent technocultural contexts of experimental encounters (at once richly virtual and real, unpredictable and constructed, more-than-human, ephemeral, embodied, haptic and tangible) to historicize and shed light on the participatory politics, ideologies, imaginaries, anxieties and (un)intended consequences of Open Science.

Jeff Hicks completed his dissertation, The Dystopian Cityscape in Postmodern Literature and Film , for the department of English in 2014. He is currently assistant professor at LA City College. His areas of research include science fiction and fantasy, dystopian literature, and cult film. He has published reviews in Science Fiction Studies and Science Fiction Film and Television and is the co-author of the Oxford Online Bibliographies entry for the film Blade Runner and of the chapter on “Urban Dystopias” in The Cambridge Companion to the City in Literature . A section of his dissertation on urban dystopias was published in the anthology Marxism and Urban Culture .

Richard Hunt graduated from English in 2016. His research areas include 20th century US literature, science fiction, cultural studies, ethnic rhetorics, and traditions of African American and Afro-diasporic musics as social and philosophic discourse. His work in sf focuses on articulations among technology, representations of subjectivity, and concepts of listening and communication, with research into the New Wave as well as the work of Octavia E. Butler, China Miéville, and musician and performer Janelle Monae.

Jennifer Kavetsky completed her dissertation, The (Manufactured) Human in U.S. Science Fiction, 1938-1950 , for the department of English in 2015. Kavetsky is currently the Writing Support Program Coordinator at UCR. Her ongoing research focuses on 20th century American and British speculative fiction, with a particular focus on gender.

Alan Lovegreen completed his dissertation, Aerofuturism: Vectors of Modernity in Nineteenth- and Twentieth Century Literature and Culture , for the department of English in 2015. Lovegreen is currently an Instructor at Orange Coast College. His research covers intersections of literature and technoculture in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, with a focus on aerofuturism in discourses of race, posthumanism, the built environment, and ecological futures. Alan has published in The Eaton Journal of Archival Research in Science Fiction , Science Fiction Studies , La Torre di Babele: Rivista di letteratura e linguistica , Criticism: A Quarterly for Literature and the Arts , and Paradoxa .

Sean Matharoo received his PhD in Comparative Literature in 2020; he studies francophone and anglophone speculative media, postcolonial theory, ecological philosophy, memory studies and trauma theory, Deleuze, Derrida, speculative realism, new materialism, film theory, sound studies, and media archaeology. At the time of graduation, he had a forthcoming article in a special issue of Horror Studies devoted to sonic horror. He has published book reviews in Science Fiction Studies and the Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts , and had a forthcoming book review in Science Fiction Film and Television . He had encyclopedia entries in Horror Literature through History: An Encyclopedia of the Stories that Speak to Our Deepest Fears . He has published an interview with Erik Davis in The Los Angeles Review of Books , and an interview with Craig Baldwin in the Eaton Journal of Archival Research in Science Fiction . He has presented his work at the International Conference for the Fantastic in the Arts and at the Society for Literature, Science and the Arts. He is also working on a remix project involving audiovisual diagrams, dead media technologies, drone, and noise.

Irene M. Morrison graduated from English in 2017. Her academic interests are primarily in the field of utopian studies, specifically utopian literature and real-world utopian ideologies. She seeks to understand how and why the Western concept of utopia is coterminous with colonialism, and the roles that science and technology (also coterminous with colonial expansion) play in utopian ideology. If utopia is a literature of colonialism, can postcolonial theory be used to both challenge and re-envision utopia? One key to this re-envisioning must be an examination of the science and technology used both in the service of colonial expansion and in utopian literature. Writers and film-makers such as Larissa Sansour (Palestinian), Nanobah Becker (Diné/Navajo), and Nalo Hopkinson (Afro-Caribbean) challenge the mainstream science fictional tradition of uncritically deploying technology to laud the rhetoric of Western technological progress. This work evolved from her Masters’ thesis on Ursula K. Le Guin’s feminist science fiction novel, The Dispossessed . Using feminist and anarchist theorists including Maria Mies, Vandana Shiva, and Noam Chomsky, it explored the political theory behind the anarchist planet Annares, as well as the allegorical significance of the Earth-like twin planet, Urras. Anarres is an “ambiguous utopia,” and provides a wealth of ideas and challenges to traditional anarchist theory, while marrying feminist and environmentalist concepts with anarchist ones in provocative ways.

Bret Noble was a PhD candidate in the Department of Hispanic Studies and researches 20th and 21st century Mexican literature and film, particularly science fiction. He is currently researching the adoption and adaptation of postapocalyptic and dystopian literary themes by Mexican authors to theorize the Mexican state and reflect the social effects of the transition from national-populism to neoliberalism in Mexico.

Josh Pearson received his PhD in English in 2018. His dissertation, Managing Power: Fictionalization and Gendered Heroism in 20th Century Popular Culture , investigated how finance capitalism and the rise of neoliberalism shapes representation of racialized gender norms in science fiction and fantasy texts. Josh's article “Seeing the Present, Grasping the Future: Articulating a ‘Financial’ Vision in Capitalist Realism” was published in Paradoxa , and his reviews have appeared in Science Fiction Studies , Science Fiction Film and Television , and The Journal of Fantastic in the Arts . He is a founding editor of The Eaton Journal of Archival Research in Science Fiction .

Brittany Roberts received her PhD in Comparative Literature in 2020; she studies Russian and Anglophone horror, science fiction, and weird fiction. Her dissertation engaged the complex relationships among humans, animals, and the environment as depicted in Cold War and post-Cold War-era Russian and Anglophone horror literature and cinema. She is particularly interested in the human/non-human binary and the ways in which notions of ontological difference are both challenged and reinscribed by dark speculative fictions of the 20th century. She has presented her work at the International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts, the Science Fiction Research Association, the Society for Literature, Science, and the Arts, and the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. Her encyclopedia entries and book reviews have appeared in Science Fiction Studies , Science Fiction Film and Television , Journal for the Fantastic in the Arts , and Horror Literature through History: An Encyclopedia of the Stories That Speak to Our Deepest Fears .

Lorenzo Servitje graduated from English at the University of California at Riverside in 2017. His work examines the mutual constitution of literature and medicine in the Victorian era, in addition to representation of medical discourse in popular culture. His articles have appeared in Literature and Medicine ,  Journal of Medical Humanities , Critical Survey , and Science Fiction Studies . He has co-edited two collections, The Walking Med: Zombies and the Medical Image (Pennsylvania State Press, 2016) and Endemic: Essays in Contagion Theory (Palgrave, 2016).

Alexander Shafer graduated from Hispanic Studies in 2017. His research focuses on Latin American literature, cultural studies, and queer theory. He wrote his dissertation, Queering Bodies: Aliens, Cyborgs, and Spacemen in Mexican and Argentine Science Fiction , on the intersection of race, gender, and sexuality in Mexican and Argentine science fiction. He has presented his research on Latin American SF at various conferences, including the Ometeca Conference for Science Fiction and Literature and the Eaton Science Fiction Conference.

Jerome Winter completed his dissertation, Nostalgia for Infinity: New Space Opera and Neoliberal Globalism , for the department of English in 2015. Winter is currently a full-time lecturer in composition at UCR. His latest research involves ecocriticism and recent speculative fiction from Afrodiasporic women writers. His book, Science Fiction, New Space Opera, and Neoliberal Globalism (2016), was published by the University of Wales Press as part of their New Dimensions in Science Fiction series. His scholarship generally focuses on the intersection of globalization and contemporary speculative fiction, and he has served as editor of Speculative Fiction for the Los Angeles Review of Books and contributed a chapter on SF art and illustration to the Oxford Handbook of Science Fiction (2014). He has published articles, interviews, and reviews in Extrapolation , Journal of Fantastic and the Arts , the Los Angeles Review of Books , SFRA , and Science Fiction Studies .

Mark Young completed his dissertation, Sonic Retro-Futures: Musical Nostalgia as Revolution in Post-1960s American Literature, Film, and Technoculture , for the department of English in 2015. Young teaches at the University of California, San Diego, where he serves as the Assistant Director of the Warren College Writing Program. He specializes in sound studies, digital media, science fiction, and American literature. His work has been published in Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction , Science Fiction Studies , Science Fiction Film and Television , Extrapolation , the Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts , the SFRA Review , and the Los Angeles Review of Books .

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Gothic and Science Fiction

Research activity.

Gothic and Science Fiction is a thriving area of teaching and research at Lancaster.

Historically, our work ranges from Liz Oakley-Brown’s work on the Premodern to Catherine Spooner’s on the Post-Millennial. We are particularly strong on media and culture and on the conversations between popular genres. Recent major publications include Post-Millennial Gothic (Catherine Spooner), Apocalyptic Fiction (Andrew Tate) and Transplantation Gothic (Sara Wasson). Within Creative Writing, Gothic and Science Fiction are also flourishing with recent works including Jenn Ashworth’s novel Fell and Curious Tales project, Brian Baker’s short films, Taj Hayer’s play North Country and Conor O’Callaghan’s novel Nothing on Earth . From 2017-2019, Sara Wasson led the AHRC-funded Translating Chronic Pain: A Critical and Creative Research Network , which constructed links between Gothic, Science Fiction and the Medical Humanities.

There is a large and lively Gothic and Science Fiction PhD community at Lancaster with a strong record of NWCDTP funding. The Department hosts the annual international conference and peer-reviewed journal Fantastika , run by PhD students and post-docs. There are regular reading groups and annual study days in both Gothic and Science Fiction; conferences organised by PhD students include Gothic Spectacle and Spectatorship, Glitches and Ghosts and Gothflix .

Group Members

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Jenn Ashworth

Professor Jenn Ashworth

Authors and the World, Creative Writing, Creative-Critical Writing, Digital Humanities, Gothic and Science Fiction, Literature and Religion, Literature, Space and Place, Literature, the Arts, Media and Performance

Brian Baker

Dr Brian Baker

Creative-Critical Writing, Digital Humanities, Gothic and Science Fiction, Literature, Science and Medicine, Literature, the Arts, Media and Performance

Kamilla Elliott

Professor Kamilla Elliott

Creative-Critical Writing, Gothic and Science Fiction, Literature, the Arts, Media and Performance

Tajinder Hayer

Tajinder Hayer

Creative Writing, Gothic and Science Fiction, Literature, Science and Medicine, Literature, Space and Place, Literature, the Arts, Media and Performance, Transcultural Writing, Practice and Research Network

Oliver Langmead

Dr Oliver Langmead

Creative Writing, Gothic and Science Fiction

Conor O'Callaghan

Conor O'Callaghan

Catherine Spooner

Professor Catherine Spooner

Creative Writing, Gothic and Science Fiction, Literature, Space and Place, Literature, the Arts, Media and Performance

Andrew Tate

Professor Andrew Tate

Gothic and Science Fiction, Institute for Social Futures Fellow, Literature and Religion, Literature, the Arts, Media and Performance

Sara Wasson

Dr Sara Wasson

Digital Humanities, FASS Health Hub, Gothic and Science Fiction, Literature, Science and Medicine, Literature, Space and Place

Publications

IMAGES

  1. Characterization in Science Fiction

    science fiction studies phd

  2. Britain's Times Literary Supplement Reviews DePauw's Science Fiction

    science fiction studies phd

  3. “Science Fiction Studies” Special Issue On Italian Science Fiction

    science fiction studies phd

  4. Science Fiction -- storytelling for teaching engineering ethics (by

    science fiction studies phd

  5. Studies in Global Science Fiction

    science fiction studies phd

  6. A Research Guide to Science Fiction Studies

    science fiction studies phd

VIDEO

  1. Sciences fiction

  2. Recensione I. Asimov: "Io, robot"

  3. Women Discuss DUNE Panel: Scholars Dive Into Frank Herbert's Dune Universe

  4. Masters of Science Fiction

  5. My Library Partnership: Regents Professor of Science Fiction Studies Dr. Lisa Yaszek

  6. FACT OR FICTION: #BUSINESSSCHOOL EDITION

COMMENTS

  1. Science fiction studies

    Science fiction studies is the common name for the academic discipline that studies and researches the history, culture, and ... PhD in English with Emphasis in Science Fiction Studies Center for the Study of Science Fiction; University of Liverpool, M.A. in Science Fiction Studies (program explores genre of science fiction and its ...

  2. Project MUSE

    Science Fiction Studies. Science Fiction Studies is a refereed scholarly journal devoted to the study of the genre of science fiction, broadly defined. It publishes articles about science fiction and book reviews on science fiction criticism; it does not publish fiction. SFS is widely considered to be the premier academic journal in its field ...

  3. Science Fiction & Fantasy

    Dorothy F. Schmidt COLLEGE OF ARTS AND LETTERS. FAU's Science Fiction and Fantasy MA concentration was the first ever graduate program in science fiction studies and fantasy studies and one of only a handful of similar programs in the world. In fact, the SF/F MA celebrated its 20th year anniversary in 2022-2023.

  4. Welcome to Speculative Fictions and Cultures of Science!

    The program offers a Designated Emphasis (DE) at the PhD level and an undergraduate minor (currently called Science Fiction and Technoculture Studies) at the undergraduate level. Our curriculum encompasses courses in the social study and history of science and medicine, in the history of technology, in speculative thought, in creative ...

  5. Lisa Yaszek

    Lisa Yaszek is Professor of Science Fiction Studies in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication at Georgia Tech, where she researches and teaches science fiction as a global language crossing centuries, continents, and cultures.She is particularly interested in issues of gender, race, and science and technology in science fiction across media as well as the recovery of lost voices in ...

  6. Science Fiction Studies

    Science Fiction Studies is a refereed scholarly journal devoted to the study of the genre of science fiction, broadly defined. It publishes articles about science fiction and book reviews on science fiction criticism; it does not publish fiction. SFS is widely considered to be the premier academic journal in its field, with strong theoretical ...

  7. Science Fiction Studies

    The Science Fiction Studies Website publishes abstracts of all articles, as well as the full texts of all reviews, historical documents, and selected essays appearing in the journal since its founding in 1973 by R.D. Mullen. Full texts of articles are posted only after an issue has been sold out. Past Issues (Abstracts, Articles, and Reviews ...

  8. Graduate Program Designated Emphasis

    The Designated Emphasis is a 12-unit interdisciplinary graduate course of study, requiring coursework across at least two departments. Two of the three required courses, if otherwise eligible, may count towards the student's PhD requirements. ... CPLT 272 The Origins and Promise of Science Fiction (4): Studies the literary, scientific, ...

  9. Science Fiction Research Association

    Science Fiction Research Association. The Oldest Professional Association Dedicated to the scholarly Inquiry of Science Fiction and the Fantastic Across All Media. Join fellow scholars, educators, librarians, editors, authors, publishers, archivists, and artists from across the globe in the SFRA.

  10. Science Fiction Studies-Volume 49, Part 1, March 2022

    Volume 49, Part 1, March 2022. Science Fiction Studies is a refereed scholarly journal devoted to the study of the genre of science fiction, broadly defined. It publishes articles about science fiction and book reviews on science fiction criticism; it does not publish fiction. SFS is widely considered to be the premier academic journal in its ...

  11. Vol. 46, No. 1, March 2019 of Science Fiction Studies on JSTOR

    Science Fiction Studies is a refereed scholarly journal devoted to the study of the genre of science fiction, broadly defined. It publishes articles about scie...

  12. Project MUSE

    Volume 49, Part 2, July 2022. Science Fiction Studies is a refereed scholarly journal devoted to the study of the genre of science fiction, broadly defined. It publishes articles about science fiction and book reviews on science fiction criticism; it does not publish fiction. SFS is widely considered to be the premier academic journal in its ...

  13. Malisa Kurtz "Alternate Cuts": An Interview with Vandana Singh

    534 SCIENCE FICTION STUDIES, VOLUME 43 (2016) Malisa Kurtz "Alternate Cuts": An Interview with Vandana Singh Vandana Singh is not only an author of science fiction and fantasy, but she also holds a PhD in theoretical particle physics and is an associate professor of physics at Framingham University. Born and raised in New Delhi, India,

  14. Fantasy/Science Fiction

    MA/PhD in Literary/Writing Studies; Undergraduate Course Offerings; Graduate Course Offerings; MFA in Creative Writing; Research. Blogs & Digital Projects; Conferences & Series; ... Fantasy/Science Fiction Fantasy/Science Fiction. Faculty working in Fantasy/Science Fiction. Robert W. Barrett, Jr. (he/him) ...

  15. Who Reads Science Fiction and Fantasy, and How Do They Feel About

    Science fiction and fantasy have been argued to be part of a mutable continuum of speculative genre fiction (Rieder, 2010). Since Darko Suvin's (1979) landmark study Metamorphoses of Science Fiction: On the Poetics and History of a Literary Genre, it is now common in science fiction studies to use the term science fiction to refer to any

  16. Science Fiction Studies is published three times a year

    2016-2017: JENNIFER JODELL is a PhD candidate at University of Minnesota-Twin Cities. Her dissertation, Mediating Bodies in Science Fiction, explores the ways in which sf texts represent the body as a medium for various forms of cultural, technological, and intersubjective exchange.Specifically, her project tracks the 19th-century trope of the mediating woman/medium through its various ...

  17. The Science of Science Fiction

    online courses. Contact us at [email protected] if you have questions. Course Number: LIT-90021. Credit: 1.50 unit (s) There are no sections of this course currently scheduled. Please contact the Pre-College Programs department at 858-534-0804 or [email protected] for information about when this course will be offered again. UC San Diego Division ...

  18. Science Fiction Studies-Volume 48, Part 2, July 2021

    Volume 48, Part 2, July 2021. Science Fiction Studies is a refereed scholarly journal devoted to the study of the genre of science fiction, broadly defined. It publishes articles about science fiction and book reviews on science fiction criticism; it does not publish fiction. SFS is widely considered to be the premier academic journal in its ...

  19. Science Fiction

    Department of English University of Washington A101 Padelford Hall Box 354330 Seattle, WA 98195-4330

  20. Science Fiction

    The course will explore such questions through a focus on science-fiction as a genre, broadly construed. In addition to reflection on what is meant by "genre," we will consider how science and the scientist are represented in works of fiction, the idea of time travel, artificial intelligence, and imagining different kinds of dystopia.

  21. Anglia Ruskin Centre for Science Fiction & Fantasy

    The study of science fiction and fantasy is now over 75 years old. Although historically it was focused in English departments, in the past twenty years this has changed and strong work is emerging in film, TV, art, and linguistics groups. The Centre for Science Fiction and Fantasy connects several major strengths within Anglia Ruskin ...

  22. Alumni

    Bret Noble was a PhD candidate in the Department of Hispanic Studies and researches 20th and 21st century Mexican literature and film, particularly science fiction. He is currently researching the adoption and adaptation of postapocalyptic and dystopian literary themes by Mexican authors to theorize the Mexican state and reflect the social ...

  23. Gothic and Science Fiction

    Gothic and Science Fiction is a thriving area of teaching and research at Lancaster. Historically, our work ranges from Liz Oakley-Brown's work on the Premodern to Catherine Spooner's on the Post-Millennial. We are particularly strong on media and culture and on the conversations between popular genres. Recent major publications include ...