Art has the ability to shape and mold society. We often look back at ancient cultures and only have their garbage middens and whatever art survived the passing of time as evidence for their grandeur. Not only do we judge the past by its art, but we also judge ourselves.
Books, movies, music and the other forms of art all have the potential to force us to look inward and try to understand, justify or fix elements within our lives. The subgenre of art that makes up science fiction is particularly effective in this regard.
Marg Gilks, Paula Fleming and Moira Allen describe the science fiction genre on their website writing-world.com and detail the evolution of the genre from just stories about scientific ideas to what they call a “literature of ideas.”
“Science fiction has come a long way since its early days … by the 70s, the genre of science-based ideas had grown; it wasn’t just concerned with science, but with consequences. It asked ‘what if?’ What if a world existed in which this or that were true? Pamela Sargent dubbed it the literature of ideas,” Gilks, Fleming and Allen said.
And so we see science fiction serves as the genre of art that intentionally tries to provoke the introspective response that art in general achieves. Science fiction’s power comes from breaking past the limits of what is true or possible and jumping outside the borders of reality, forcing us to face controversial aspects of morality, social structure, religion and so much more that we would otherwise happily leave uninspected.
In last Friday’s Reflector talking about this year’s Academy Awards, opinion editor Alie Dalee commended the recent science fiction film “Her” as a deserving nominee.
“‘Her’ deserves the Oscar because it is a call-to-action for a generation too buried in its idealism, eyes bored into iPhones, to look up and engage in a reality so raw and chaotic, and yet so grounded in a beauty too refined to display on a retina screen and manages to capture the idealistic struggle in all of its pragmatic glory,” Dalee said.
This cry for a removal of distraction and return to a more natural human existence exemplifies just one of many extremely culturally relevant problems science fiction can confront.
The Disney-Pixar film “WALL-E” discusses the same social conundrum as “Her.” In “WALL-E” all of the humans have lost sight of their planet’s beauty and irreversibly trashed it to the point where everyone must take refuge in spacefaring colony ships. The story follows one of the last remaining trash-cleanup robots, Wall-e, who over the course of nearly 700 years developed what we would recognize as a sense of beauty and the whole range of human emotions. Pixar juxtaposes the little robot with the citizens of the colony ship who are all inextricably attached to their floating social media chairs and almost incapable of the same emotions wall-e so slowly developed.
Pixar achieves a striking juxtaposition of Wall-e’s struggle for life, love and a subtle appreciation of beauty against the peaceful and harmonious lives of the hoverchair-ridden people who hardly live what we would call happy or well-examined lives. This juxtaposition serves as a check against the same kind of loss in society that “Her” more subtly tries to convey.
In all, we should not write off science fiction as just a nerdy obsession or a frivolous, unproductive waste of time, but we should embrace it as one of the more forward-thinking and intentionally introspective instances of the arts.
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Science fiction stimulates forward-thinking and introspection
Cameron Clarke
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March 7, 2014
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