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The Writing Styles Of 2 Prominent British

Science Fiction Authors Essay, Research Paper


The Writing Styles of 2 Prominent British Science Fiction Authors


“Science fiction is one of the more secluded parade grounds where private


fantasy and public event meet. They call it entertainment”. (Aldiss Billion 1)


This quote is interpreted to mean that, in the genre of science fiction there is


a fusion of fantasy and reality. It is this combination of two opposites that


produces the novel categorized today as science fiction. There is one aspect of


science fiction that separates it from any other genre. Science fiction can be


written as fantasy one day, and read as scientific fact the next. Jules Verne


has written about man setting foot on the moon. When read by its original


readers the idea of space travel was not a reality. It is now common knowledge


that man has walked on the moon, and when this novel is read today no longer is


space travel considered to be imaginary. Skillful science fiction novelists


brilliantly blend fantasy with reality, composing a very fine line between the


two perceptions. When reading, one sometimes does not even realize when the


author makes the transition from a plausible concept to a ludicrous one.


Science fiction is a relatively new term. Novels were first categorized this


way towards the close of the 1920’s. This word was first utilized in short


stories that appeared in the pulp magazines, of the era. The phrase “science


fiction” was considered an enhancement of the term scientifiction. However


several British novels were categorized as scientific romances before the 1920’s.


(Aldiss Trillion 27) Before Frankenstein the only forms of science fiction were


“the plays of Aristophanes or some Myrenaean fragment concerning the flight to


the sun on a goose’s back.” (Aldiss Billion 2) In these fantasies there is no


blend of reality and fantasy, it is pure fantasy. There is no one story that


is accepted to be the first science fiction tale. Science fiction as perceived


today originated with Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. (Aldiss Trillion 18)


Mary Shelley was the wife of the famous British poet, Percy Bysshe


Shelley and daughter of Mary Wollenstonecraft. She was born in 1797 and her


mother died soon after birth. Mary Wollenstonecraft married her husband at the


age of fifteen. She produced her most famous novel entitled Frankenstein at the


age of nineteen. It was published in 1818. (Ash 178)


The origin of the novel came to Shelley in a dream, in which she says


she saw “the hideous phantasm of a man stretched out, and then, on the working


of some powerful engine, show signs of life, and stir with an uneasy half vital


motion” (Bleiler 6) The story starts with several letters written by Captain


Walton to his sister. Walton has been navigating the Arctic ocean when he


observes a sledge being pushed by a gigantic body. The day after the crew saves


Victor Frankenstein from Geneva from a similar sledge. After Victor has


recuperated, he recounts his tale to Walton. This account is the largest


section of the book. The novel also includes six chapters of the creature


explaining his life. (Bleiler 5) Mary’s style of narration appears to be very


puzzling. However the first reader’s of Frankenstein were very familiar with


this style of narration. (Aldiss Billion 21)


Shelley brilliantly includes how the monster feels. She analyzes the


monster psychologically. “One of Frankenstein’s greatest merits is that its


tale of exterior adventure and misfortune is always accompanied by a


psychological depth.” (Aldiss Billion 25)


Throughout the story the readers main interest revolves around


Frankenstein’s creation. The creature is never given a name, it was referred to


in the story as “creature,” “daemon,” or “monster.” For this reason


Frankenstein has been thought to be the monster, when he was the creator.


One everlasting fascination of the novel are its ambiguities,


Frankenstein is never seen throwing the switch to give his creation life. The


language of the novel makes it very easy to confuse the two main roles and


believe that Frankenstein is the creature. Shelley also frequently describes


Victor Frankenstein as if he were the monster. “We? restored him to animation?


As soon as he showed signs of life we wrapped him up in blankets. I often


feared that his suffering had deprived him of understanding? He is generally


melancholy and despairing?.” This is not Shelley describing the monster, but


Shelley describing Victor. (Aldiss Trillion 42)


Mary structured much of the book around intelligence. Victor


Frankenstein is not the only character in the novel searching for knowledge,


throughout the book Walton and the monster are also looking for enlightenment.


(Bleiler 7) “The monster, product of guilty knowledge, threatens the world with


evil progeny.” (Bleiler 7) Frankenstein is yet another work of science fiction


which was not thought to be realistically possible by most people until recently.


This is an excerpt from criticism of science fiction authors, written just 15


years ago “Even today, when our diet is the unlikely, Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein


seems extremely far fetched, how much more so must it have appeared on


publication in 1818.” (Bleiler 3) Mary Shelly was one of the few that thought


it might be possible to give life to an inanimate creature. “The event on which


this fiction is founded has been supposed, by Dr. Darwin and some

of the


physiological writers of Germany as not of impossible occurrence.”(Shelley


xxvii) Today with the advancements recently made with cloning, it almost seems


possible to create a life form from inanimate objects. Because scientists are


able to clone a sheep, monkey, and theoretically a human, it makes it seem very


plausible that a work of fiction, such as Frankenstein might eventually become


reality. “The attention psychoanalysis has drawn to the few but powerful


archetypal figures in the psyche paved a way for the acceptance of diverse arts-


surrealism, photography, cinema, and science fiction, where aliens, robots,


spaceships, planets, and so on act as counters in a complex mental game. A


character landing on the moon can be a symbol of conquest, of fulfillment, or of


alienation, depending on context. Writers perhaps understand this more readily


than mainstream critics, who do not always distinguish between characters and


personages. Wells had the new language off from the start.” (Aldiss Trillion


117) Herbert George Wells was born in the suburbs of London in a place called


Bromley. After failed attempts at being a tailor’s and chemist’s apprentice he


won a scholarship to the Normal School of Science. He studied there for about


one year. Wells then tried to become a teacher, but failed. It was as a last


resort when he turned toward a writing profession in which he enjoyed overnight


success. (Ash 204) Wells originated many commonly used science fictional ideas.


He was the first writer to ever use evolution as a way to look back in time, as


well as forward. In his novel entitled The Grisly Folk Wells tells the story of


mankind struggling against the primitive Neanderthals. He also wrote a book


called A Story of the Stone Age. Wells was the first to look far into the


worlds past as well as its future. (Aldiss Trillion 120)


Wells had three main qualities that made him the literary success that


he was. He was an inquiring person and searched for knowledge in all of his


stories. Wells also had the natural ability to observe the world the way it is,


with no prejudices or biased opinions. He also avoided writing lead characters


in any one of his novels. This did not permit the reader to identify with the


person and accept anything offered. (Aldiss Trillion 120) War of the Worlds was


first published in 1897. It is the story of Martian invaders that landed on


earth. It is told by an Englishman who observes the invaders moving in on


London, while the army is doing everything they can to hold them off. London is


quickly evacuated before the invaders die, they were killed by common microbes.


Wells does not reveal the Martians appearance until over halfway into


the book. When they are seen, they are horrific looking. (Aldiss Trillion 121)


“They were, I now saw, the most unearthly creatures it is possible to conceive.


They were huge round bodies-or rather, heads-about for feet in diameter, each


body having in front of it a face. This face had no nostrils-indeed the


Martians do not seem to have any sense of smell, but it had a pair of very large


dark-coloured eyes, and just beneath this a kind of fleshy beak. In the back of


this head or body-I scarcely know how to speak of it-was a single tight tympanic


surface, since known to be anatomically an ear, though it must have been almost


useless in our denser air. In a group round the mouth were sixteen slender,


almost whip-like tentacles, arranged in two bunches of eight each.” (Wells 111)


Wells used three standards to produce The War of the Worlds. He writes about


the present day. While the reader recognizes the time as his own, he is being


trained to except the far fetched appearance of what follows. (Aldiss Trillion


122) This is the method Wells uses to create the fine line between fantasy and


reality that was discussed earlier in this report. Secondly, he incorporates


the newer scientific discoveries into his work, such as the theory of evolution,


and microorganisms. Lastly he creates a society like todays that welcomes


criticism of itself and of mankind. (Aldiss Trillion 122) “Wells spoke of two


kinds of thinking, directed and undirected thought. In The Work, Wealth and


Happiness of Mankind (1931), Wells talks in chapter two of directed thought as


something which enters philosophy with Plato and which defines the scientific


aspect of modern civilization. Undirected thought is a sort of muzzy version of


thinking, imaginative play, almost what we would call a hypnoid state.” (Aldiss


Trillion 121) “Wells’s writing moves gradually from undirected to directed


thought. From a fiction capable of ironic and ambivalent tolerances to a


functional fiction directed towards proof and prediction.” (Aldiss Trillion


121) Science fiction is not classified as an entity. It is the similar writing


accomplishments of many men and women, which for handiness we categorize these


authors under the label of science fiction. Many authors resent the


classification; many take pride in it. (Aldiss Trillion 20) Science fiction is


considered to be one of the great literary successes of the later half


twentieth century. Like authors of any other genre, science fiction writers


are considered to be artists. (Aldiss Trillion 13) It is clear that Wells and


Shelly should be considered more then just good writers of their time. They


should be considered brilliant artists that have created many masterpieces.

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