ABSTRACT

Reading by Starlight explores the characteristics in the writing, marketing and reception of science fiction which distinguish it as a genre.
Damien Broderick explores the postmodern self-referentiality of the sci-fi narrative, its intricate coded language and discursive `encyclopaedia'. He shows how, for perfect understanding, sci-fi readers must learn the codes of these imaginary worlds and vocabularies, all the time picking up references to texts by other writers.
Reading by Starlight includes close readings of paradigmatic cyberpunk texts and writings by SF novelists and theorists including Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke, Brian Aldiss, Patrick Parrinder, Kim Stanley Robinson, John Varley, Roger Zelazny, William Gibson, Fredric Jameson and Samuel R. Delaney.

part |101 pages

Modern Science Fiction

chapter |18 pages

New World, New Texts

chapter |16 pages

Generic Engineering

chapter |12 pages

Genre or Mode?

chapter |16 pages

The Uses of Otherness

chapter |12 pages

Reading the Episteme

chapter |12 pages

The Stars My Dissertation

part |57 pages

Postmodern Science Fiction

chapter |14 pages

Making Up Worlds

chapter |10 pages

Allography and Allegory

chapter |10 pages

Sf as a Modular Calculus

chapter |6 pages

The Autumnal City