MyStyle
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does any body know any science fiction texts?
Twilight is sci-fi, and brilliant sci-fi at that.aLexTasyy said:ahaha...my english teacher says twilight is sci-fi...im like wtf? your choice...
How dare you put Stephanie Meyer in the same league as authors like Philip K. Dick, Asimov, Ursula Leguin.Zephyrio said:Twilight is sci-fi, and brilliant sci-fi at that.
Wait, are you talking about the twilight zone? Cause that's not what I took twilight to mean... or is there some other old twilight series?Zephyrio said:The reason Twilight, the old series, is so brilliant is because the film-makers actively, and allegorically, make comments about the hidden and suppressed fears of the times in which the films are set. For example, in one episode, a particularly brilliant one, it commented on the fear of nuclear obliteration - that is, the destruction of the earth through nuclear bombs. People took this threat very seriously, and unsurprisingly so, given the Cold War between the USSR and the USA bringing along with it the threat of nuclear annihilation.
Now if that isn't Sci-Fi then I'm a kangaroo's joey. Read his Wiki page and it will also tell you that he predicted air conditioning, the internet, automobiles, television, the Apollo Space Programme, helicopters, projectors and jukeboxes. Today sci-fi predicts space travel, warp drives and travelling faster than light, transporters, matter converters, laser guns and so on. The sci-fi has just changed because he wrote about is now science-fact!Wikipedia said:Jules Gabriel Verne (February 8, 1828 – March 24, 1905) was a French author who pioneered the science-fiction genre. He is best known for his novels Journey to the Center of the Earth (written in 1864), From the Earth to the Moon (1865), Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (1869–1870), and Around the World in Eighty Days (1873). Verne wrote about space, air, and underwater travel before navigable aircraft and practical submarines were invented, and before any means of space travel had been devised. Consequently he is often referred to as the "Father of science fiction", along with H. G. Wells.[1]