The way to ground zero : the atomic bomb in American science fiction

Author(s)

    • Bartter, Martha A.

Bibliographic Information

The way to ground zero : the atomic bomb in American science fiction

Martha A. Bartter

(Contributions to the study of science fiction and fantasy, no. 33)

Greenwood Press, 1988

Available at  / 16 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. [243]-265

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Bartter surveys 250 American science-fiction stories, and American SF novels--with occasional overlaps of stories made into episodic novels--that have some relationship, often direct, sometimes marginal, to atomic weapons and their effects. . . . Highly recommended for popular literature collections. Choice Divided into three principal parts, The Way to Ground Zero begins by exploring The Way to Hiroshima. Through a detailed analysis of the works included, Bartter reveals the sociopolitical assumptions that authors took for granted and develops a method by which these assumptions can be disclosed. She shows that encoded in these fictions we can find the patterns that led us to create and use the atomic bomb. In the second section, Bartter looks at the deeper assumptions on which these sociopolitical assumptions rest, focusing particularly on those which perpetuate considerations of nuclear war--both in science fiction and in actual policy making. Finally, Bartter explores alternative assumptions proposed by innovative science fiction writers. Throughout, an attempt is made to forge a deeper understanding of the ways in which science fiction both reflects and influences human and international relations. Students of science fiction and of literature and politics will find Bartter's work enlightening, provocative reading. Bartter argues that a close examination of American fiction, particularly science fiction, can offer important new insights into the events surrounding the bombing of Hiroshima in 1945. The use of an atomic bomb to end the war followed a scenario long established in science fiction--defeating our enemy with a super-weapon developed by native technological genius. By examining the interrelationship between this persistent plot-device and the development and use of a real super-weapon, Bartter sheds new light on the transactional role of literature and real life. Her analysis is based on a comprehensive theory of human nature, substantiated by exhaustive research in science fiction archives and libraries and covers a large number of stories--both well-known and relatively obscure--featuring super weapons or super war and published by American authors.

Table of Contents

Introduction: The Superman Syndrome The Way to Hiroshima International Waters: Before World War I "I Have Seen the Future": Before World Dark Words of Warning Science and Science Fiction A Science Fiction World Circling Ground Zero The Nature of "Human Nature" The Hero and Society: Sturgeon Versus Heinlein Humans and History Leaving Ground Zero New Assumptions Works Cited Bibliography Index

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