The celebration of the fantastic : selected papers from the Tenth Anniversary International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts

Bibliographic Information

The celebration of the fantastic : selected papers from the Tenth Anniversary International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts

edited by Donald E. Morse, Marshall B. Tymn, and Csilla Bertha

(Contributions to the study of science fiction and fantasy, no. 49)

Greenwood Press, 1992

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Note

Conference held in 1989 in Dania, Florida

Includes bibliographical references (p. [291]-293) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Celebration of the Fantastic reaffirms the wide range and validity of the subject, treatment, and approach that the fantastic demands. Twenty-five essays, selected from among the more than 230 presented at the Tenth Anniversary Conference of the IAFA, consider writers as diverse as Stephen King, Doris Lessing, Rudyard Kipling, Loren Eiseley, Mary Stewart, Bernard Malamud, Orson Scott Card, Toni Morrison, Henry James, and Ray Bradbury as well as television personalities, film directors, and German and Hungarian visual artists. Also included are essays on science fiction writers Robert Silverberg, Joe Haldeman, and Greg Bear. Some of the more provocative work is on Feminist Fantasy and Open Structure, The Greatest Fantasy on Earth: The Superweapon in Fiction and Fact, Virtual Space and Its Boundaries in Science Fiction Film and Television, The Fantastic in German Democratic Republic Literature, Csontvary: The Painter of the Sun's Path, and The Shaman in Modern Fantasy. The essays illustrate the essential theme of the fantastic: the testing of the limits of civilization and the questioning of commonly accepted values and ideas as writers and artists explore the hidden and the repressed.

Table of Contents

Preface Introduction--Celebrating the Fantastic: This "Enormous and Seductive Subject" by Donald E. Morse Theory Victorian and Modern Fantasy: Some Contrasts by Colin Manlove (The International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts Distinguished Scholar Address of 1989) The Greatest Fantasy on Earth: The Superweapon in Fiction and Fact by H. Bruce Franklin Pagan Survival: Why the Shaman in Modern Fantasy? by Roger C. Schlobin Some Thoughts on Modernism and Science Fiction (Suggested by Robert Silverberg's DOWNWARD TO THE EARTH) by Robert Latham Godmaking in the Heartland: Cultural Texts in the Tales of Alvin Maker by Brian Attebery Myth and Legend "What Dreams May Come?" Relativity of Perception in Doris Lessing's BRIEFING FOR A DESCENT INTO HELL by Peter Malekin Kipling's Myth of Making: Creation and Contradiction in PUCK OF POOK'S HILL by Jack G. Voller Mithraic Aspects of Merlin in Mary Stewart's THE CRYSTAL CAVE by Marilyn Jurich Dolorous Strokes, Or, Balin at the Bat: Malamud, Malory and Chretien by John Kimsey Autobiography as Science Fiction: The Strange Case of Loren Eiseley by Gale E. Christianson The Supernatural THE FIFTH CHILD: Lessing's Subversion of the Pastoral by Ellen Pifer The Ghost and the Self: The Supernatural Fiction of Henry James by Leonard Heldreth Toni Morrison's BELOVED: Rememory, History, and the Fantastic by Gary W. Daily Visual Arts: Painting, Film, and Television CsontVAry: The Painter of the "Sun's Path" by Csilla Bertha Eros and Thanatos: The Art of Alfred Kubin on the Edge of the Other Side by Barbara Alexander-Schaechtelin Fantasy According to MISTER ROGER'S NEIGHBORHOOD and IN THE NIGHT KITCHEN by C.W. Sullivan III Virtual Space and Its Boundaries in Science Fiction Film and Television: TRON, MAX HEADROOM, and WARGAMES by Judith B. Kerman Giving the Devil More than His Due: THE WITCHES OF EASTWICK as Fiction and Film by Kenneth Jurkiewicz The Monomyth in Time Travel Films by Donald Palumbo Science Fiction Astronauts, Angels, and Time Machines: The Fantastic in German Democratic Republic Literature by Barbara Mabee Legitimate Sequels: Character Structures and the Subject in Greg Bear's Sequel Novels by Len Hatfield Joe Haldeman: Cyberpunk Before Cyberpunk Was Cool? by Joan Gordon Fantasy and Horror Feminist Fantasy and Open Structure in Monique Wittig's LES GUERILLERES by Laurence M. Porter Art Versus Madness in Stephen King's MISERY by Tony Magistrale Ray Bradbury, Herman Melville, and Nineteenth-Century American Romance by Steven E. Kagle Bibliography Index

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