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Extract
In an earlier study, De la féerie à la science-fiction, I tried to show the internal consistency and the chronological succession of fairy tales, fantastic stories and works of scientific anticipation or extrapolation. They represent three styles of the imaginary, and illustrate, each in its own way (“like hollow molds,” I said), the chief epochs of man's changing situation on his planet, as he himself saw it, more or less naively, in each case. First he depicted himself as powerless and wonderstruck; then confident in science and technology, he considered himself the fortunate conqueror of the planet; and finally he saw himself as isolated and marginal in the immensity of space—just at the very time when he was learning to move about in it.
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- Copyright © 1975 Fédération Internationale des Sociétés de Philosophie / International Federation of Philosophical Societies (FISP)
References
1 In Images, images…, José Corti, 1966, pp. 15-59; reprinted in Obliques, January 1975.
2 Boileau and Narcejac, Le grand Secret.
3 Campbell, The Sky is Dead.
4 Arthur C. Clarke, The Nine Billion Names of God.
5 Brachinus displosor, able to project some thirty discarges of hydrogen peroxide and hydroquinone, giving off a heat 100 °C. (first studied by a doctor in Napoleon's army in Spain). He would make a remarkable recruit for a science fiction writer.
6 See Images, images…, op. cit., pp. 32-39.
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