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Full Description
"Science fiction" can be translated into "real unreality." More than a genre like fantasy, which creates entirely new realms of possibility, science fiction constructs its possibilities from what is real, from what is, indeed, possible, or conceivably so. This collection, then, looks to understand and explore the "unreal reality," to note ways in which our culture's continually changing and evolving mores of sex and sexuality are reflected in, dissected by, and deconstructed through the genre of science fiction.
This book is a collection of new essays, with the general objective of filling a gap in the literature about sex and science fiction (although some work has gone before, none of it is recent). The essays herein explore the myriad ways in which authors--regardless of format (print, film, television, etc.)--envision very different beings expressing this most fundamental of human behaviors.
Contents
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements viii
Introduction: Sexing Science Fiction
MICHAEL G. CORNELIUS
PART ONE : ALIEN
The Future, in Bed with the Past: Miscegenation in Science Fiction Film and Television
CYNTHIA J. MILLER and A. BOWDOIN VAN RIPER
Alienating Sex: The Discourse of Sexuality in the Works of Octavia Butler
ANCA ROSU
"We pair off ! One man, one woman": The Heterosexual Imperative in Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis Trilogy
ECHO E. SAVAGE
Love at First Contact: Sex, Race and Colonial Fantasy in Star Trek: First Contact
ALLISON WHITNEY
"They teach you that in Whore Academy?" A Quantitative Examination of Sex and Sex Workers in Joss Whedon's Firefly and Dollhouse
HEATHER M. PORTER
The Evil Wet Nurse: Preoedipal Development and Primo Levi's Science Fiction
ROBERT C. PIRRO
PART TWO : TECHNO
Patriarchy, Paternity and Papas: Reproductive Technologies and Parenthood in Science Fiction
ERIN GRAYSON SAPP
"I have worked hard at her head and brain": Dr. Moreau and the New Woman
THOMAS G. COLE II
"Are we not men?" Degeneration, Future-Sex and The Time Machine
LARRY T. SHILLOCK
Space Apes Want Our Women! Primate Lust in American Science Fiction
MATTHEW H. HERSCH
Technology as a Nexus for Homoerotic Desire in Boys' Series Books
MICHAEL G. CORNELIUS
(Inter)Mediated Sexuality in the Science Fiction of J. G. Ballard
CLARE PARODY
Human, Alien, Techno—What Next? Evolutionary Psychology, Science Fiction and
SHERRY GINN
Conclusion: Sexing Science Fiction, Take Two
SHERRY GINN
About the Contributors
Index