Where the Mundane and the anti-Mundane might meet, in a broadly elegant definition of the genre and its importance:
Does the story tell me something worth knowing, that I had not known before, about the relationship between man and technology? Does it enlighten me on some area of science where I had been in the dark? Does it open a new horizon for my thinking? Does it lead me to think new kinds of thoughts, that I would not otherwise perhaps have thought at all? Does it suggest possibilities about the alternative possible future courses my world can take? Does it illuminate events and trends of today, by showing me where they may lead tomorrow? Does it give me a fresh and objective point of view on my own world and culture, perhaps by letting me see it through the eyes of a different kind of creature entirely, from a planet light-years away? - These qualities are not only among those which make science fiction good, they are what make it unique. Be it never so beautifully written, a story is not a good science fiction story unless it rates high in these aspects. The content of the story is as valid a criterion as the style.
2 comments:
Pohl is right in his demands on the genre -- and these are TOUGH demands on any kind of fiction.
I sometimes look back on the old stuff I wrote, and think "I didn't push far enough. The ideas weren't fresh enough." You have to always push further, almost like a scientist, always asking "What haven't we understood yet?".
Especially in SF we must be wary of recycling ideas which have lost their relevance. (If I see another METROPOLIS/BLADE RUNNER-ish city, I'll puke). It's hard. But rewarding.
-A.R.Yngve
http://yngve.bravehost.com
Noted. Corrected. Thanks.
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