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SFE: Scientific Romance

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} }) </script> </div> </form> </fieldset> <article class="entryArticle content STeditorial"> <header class="entryHeader icon-theme"> <h1 class="entryTitle">Scientific Romance </h1> </header><p class='tagLine'>Entry updated 18 November 2024. Tagged: Theme.</p><div class="browsingBtns"> <span> <input class="button PNI previous" type="button" onclick="window.location.href='/next.php?id=p&entry=scientific_romance'" value="Prev" /> </span> <span> <input class="button PNI next" type="button" onclick="window.location.href='/next.php?&entry=scientific_romance'" value="Next" /> </span> <span> <input class="button PNI incoming" type="button" onclick="window.location.href='/incoming.php?entry=scientific_romance'" value="About This Entry" title="What links to the entry; contributor initials explained; how to cite; other information" /> </span> </div><p style='float:right; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:10px; position: relative; top: 3px;'> <a href='/gallery.php?id=Moskowitz-Moons.jpg' target='_blank'> <img src='https://x.sf-encyclopedia.com/gal/thumbs/Moskowitz-Moons.jpg' alt='pic'></a></p> <p>Many terms have been applied to the constantly mutating braid of stories loosely enclosed in this encyclopedia under the rubric of science fiction (or sf) (see <a href="/entry/definitions_of_sf">Definitions of SF</a>; <a href="/entry/fabulation">Fabulation</a>; <a href="/entry/sf_megatext">SF Megatext</a>). Three of the strands that make up sf as a whole are relevant here. <a href="/entry/proto_sf">Proto SF</a> represents a loose but extremely useful hindsight omnium gatherum term for a wide range of texts from periods long past, from which contemporary forms variously grew; <a href="/entry/genre_sf">Genre SF</a> increasingly (though not exclusively) applies to the "classic" sf of America in the twentieth century, and is applied here in a manner normally consistent with a default understanding of its beginning with Hugo <a href="/entry/gernsback_hugo">Gernsback</a> (see also <a href="/entry/scientifiction">Scientifiction</a>) ; and Scientific Romance here applies mostly (though not exclusively) to a loosely-defined form of sf commonly found in the UK from the late nineteenth and through first half of the twentieth century, though examples of the form continue to appear into the twenty-first. (The term <a href="/entry/planetary_romance">Planetary Romance</a>, a form of words that suggests similar definitional intent, is used in this encyclopedia primarily to specify a venue distinct from Terra where various kinds of sf can be set and flourish, including genre sf and the Scientific Romance, as well as <a href="/entry/space_opera">Space Opera</a>.) In his <i>Yesterday's Tomorrows: The Story of Classic British Science Fiction in 100 Books</i> (<b>2020</b>), Mike <a href="/entry/ashley_mike">Ashley</a> properly uses the term science fiction (or sf) to oversee the wide range of texts covered in his conspectus, many but not all of them Scientific Romances, almost all of them novels, many of them listed in this entry.</p> <p>With respect to the years of Jules <a href="/entry/verne_jules">Verne</a>'s prime and into the twentieth century, much French sf may fairly be thought of in terms of the Scientific Romance; an emphasis in this encyclopedia on British iterations of the form does not represent a repudiation of this communality. But there is no clear mutual agreement on the terms of that conversation. As <a href="/entry/ashley_mike">Ashley</a> notes, Jules <a href="/entry/renard_joseph">Renard</a>'s essay, "Du roman merveilleux-scientifique et de son action sur l'intelligence du progr&egrave;s" ["Of the Marvellous-Scientific Novel and its Influence on the Understanding of Progress"] (October 1909 <i>Le Spectateur</i>), associates the "roman merveilleux-scientifique" with H G <a href="/entry/wells_h_g">Wells</a>, distinguishing it from Verne's "marvel" novels: a suggestion which, however persuasively put, leads into complexities beyond the reach of this entry. It may be enough here to clock the <i>roman scientifique's</i> cousinly links to the Scientific Romance, to note that they are not entirely synonymous, and to add that the <i>roman scientifique</i> is similarly folded into French Fantastika.</p> <p>The roots of what became the UK Scientific Romance are buried deep in texts here referred to as <a href="/entry/proto_sf">Proto SF</a> [which see for a more extended presentation; for Horizon of Expectations and Taproot Texts see <i>The</i> <a href="/entry/encyclopedia_of_fantasy_the">Encyclopedia of Fantasy</a> under <b>links</b> below]. By the beginning of the nineteenth century the map of potential harbingers of the full form begins to become more detailed, full of both dead-ends and aper&ccedil;us: a jostle of perspectives in the light of which it is not entirely frivolous to note that Lord <a href="/entry/byron_lord">Byron</a>'s "Darkness" [1816] significantly adumbrates the Scientific Romance, decades before any book was so named; it is also easy to identify aspects of Mary <a href="/entry/shelley_mary_wollstonecraft">Shelley</a>'s <i>Frankenstein; Or, the New Prometheus</i> (<b>1818</b> 3vols) &ndash; its retrospective narrative; the <a href="/entry/frankenstein_monster">Frankenstein Monster</a> himself with his dream that Enlightenment <i>Bildung</i> applies to him; the prolepses of something like <a href="/entry/evolution">Evolution</a> &ndash; that also adumbrate the full form, as does <i>The Last Man</i> (<b>1826</b>). Soon enough, the term itself, variously understood, begins to appear: in Charles <a href="/entry/dickens_charles">Dickens</a>'s description (24 March 1866 <i>All the Year Round</i>) of Henri <a href="/entry/de_parville_henri">de Parville</a>'s <i>Un habitant de la plan&egrave;te Mars: roman d'anticipation</i> (<b>1865</b>); in the anonymously written "Some of our Social Philosophers" (15 June 1866 <i>The New York Nation</i>), which applies the phrase to Oliver Wendell <a href="/entry/holmes_oliver_wendell">Holmes</a>'s <i>Elsie Venner: A Romance of Destiny</i> (<b>1861</b> 2vols); and in James <a href="/entry/de_mille_james">de Mille</a>'s <i>A Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder</i> (written 1860s; <b>1888</b>), where a character in the <a href="/entry/club_story">Club-Story</a> frame describes the manuscript's tale as "scientific romance". But these, it should be remembered, are descriptive phrases, not defining phrases.</p> <p>Much more significant is C H <a href="/entry/hinton_c_h">Hinton</a>'s use of the term for several of his books, including two collections of <i>Scientific Romances</i> (colls <b>1886</b> and <b>1898</b>) which mix speculative essays and stories; it was an innovation soon picked up by reviewers and essayists, and was widely applied in responding to the early novels of H G <a href="/entry/wells_h_g">Wells</a>, which became the key exemplars of the genre, disregarding Wells's own initial resistance to the term. Despite its obvious applicability to his work, and its increasing use elsewhere in the early twentieth century, he tended unusefully to lump his sf and fantasy novels together as "fantastic and imaginative romances", but eventually, in <i>The Scientific Romances of H.G. Wells</i> (omni <b>1933</b>), an omnibus which contains most of his best-known sf novels, he did much, even if in arrears, to secure the term's definitive status in the UK (it might be noted that the following year in America, where neither "science fiction" nor "Scientific Romance" had yet become familiar terms, this omnibus was retitled <i>Seven Famous Novels</i>). Most of the later speculative fiction excluded from the omnibus &ndash; from <i>The War in the War</i> (<b>1908</b>) and <i>The World Set Free</i> (<b>1914</b>), then onward to the pessimistic tales of his last years, including <i>The Holy Terror</i> (<b>1939</b>) and others &ndash; can be understood as further explorations in the possibilities of the form. </p> <p>The term did not at first "compete" in the definition tourney. It may be that the only conspicuous early use of "Scientific Romance" in contexts where "science fiction" might normally be expected was in the version of Ben <a href="/entry/abramson_ben">Abramson</a>'s bibliography appended to J O <a href="/entry/bailey_j_o">Bailey</a>'s seminal <i>Pilgrims Through Space and Time: Trends and Patterns in Scientific and Utopian Fiction</i> (<b>1947</b>), where authors from Jonathan <a href="/entry/swift_jonathan">Swift</a> to Mary <a href="/entry/shelley_mary_wollstonecraft">Shelley</a> to E E <a href="/entry/smith_e_e">Smith</a> to Clifford D <a href="/entry/simak_clifford_d">Simak</a> are listed as authors of "Scientific Romances": but Bailey sidesteps any attempts at heuristic speciation by never using the term "science fiction" at all. Contrariwise, tales <i>circa</i> 1900-1935 included in the <b>Radium Age</b> series edited by Joshua <a href="/entry/glenn_joshua">Glenn</a>, seem to be referred to there as "proto sf" or "radium age sci-fi", on the unusual argument that the Scientific Romance ended in 1900. None of the titles included in that series are referred to in this encyclopedia by either label.</p> <p>In his <i>Scientific Romance in Britain 1890-1950</i> (<b>1985</b>), Brian M <a href="/entry/stableford_brian_m">Stableford</a> convincingly expanded his analysis of the nineteenth century origins of the term in order to compare and contrast the evolving and (until the 1940s) increasingly distinct UK and US traditions of sf (see first paragraph above, and next paragraph below). He subsequently and enormously expanded his assay as <i>The New Atlantis: A Narrative History of the Scientific Romance</i> (<b>2016</b> 4vols). This encyclopedia treats the work of at least 200 authors in terms consistent with, and evolved from, the premises suggested in <i>The New Atlantis</i>.</p> <p>Ultimately "Scientific Romance" may be understood through a range of descriptors, none of which in isolation defines the form in its complex multi-causal maturity. But a fundamental shaping distinction between the two main twentieth century forms of sf in English helps point the road. The shaping world-event for the <a href="/entry/golden_age_of_sf">Golden Age</a> of American <a href="/entry/genre_sf">Genre SF</a> was the <i>ongoing</i> flood of <a href="/entry/world_war_two">World War Two</a>, with its storyable disasters and heroic triumphs of the <a href="/entry/technology">Technological</a> Sublime as signalled by a constant flow of <a href="/entry/invention">Inventions</a>; contrastingly, the Scientific Romance took definitive shape in the <i>aftermath</i> of <a href="/entry/world_war_one">World War One</a> and the Spanish flu, events giving ample context to any sense that, for Scientific Romance authors, the twentieth century was not going to end well (see <a href="/entry/optimism_and_pessimism">Optimism and Pessimism</a>) and that, as with British culture overall, the Great War, in which the British army suffered almost 900,000 fatalities, would be the defining experience for the twentieth century. </p> <p>Stableford himself nowhere provides, nor do we suggest here, any single necessary condition that a text must meet to be described as an example of the form. In this encyclopedia, in language as consistent as possible with Stableford's, the Scientific Romance can be delineated through a polythetic list of characteristics, the whole comprising a unsiloed spectrum or fuzzy set without strict definitional boundaries, presented here in no particular order: <b>1</b> by a tendency to unfold narratives characterized by long evolutionary perspectives (see <a href="/entry/decadence">Decadence</a>; <a href="/entry/devolution">Devolution</a>; <a href="/entry/evolution">Evolution</a>), perhaps the most famous single example being Olaf <a href="/entry/stapledon_olaf">Stapledon</a>'s <i>Last and First Men: A Story of the Near and Far Future</i> (<b>1930</b>); <b>2</b> by a focus on long vistas brooded upon by meditative deuteragonists (see <a href="/entry/new_zealander">New Zealander</a>; <a href="/entry/religion">Religion</a>; <a href="/entry/ruins_and_futurity">Ruins and Futurity</a>) whose relationship with much more active protagonists (ie dictators and plutocrats) is subaltern; but to whom, <b>3</b>, a melancholy dissent is sometimes offered, typically in hindsight, often after the false culture <a href="/entry/heroes">Hero</a>'s death; <b>4</b> by a sense that tales in this mode hover at the brink of conveying negative lessons about the <a href="/entry/evolution">Evolutionary</a> fitness of <i>Homo sapiens</i> to dominate the future (see again <a href="/entry/optimism_and_pessimism">Optimism and Pessimism</a>); <b>5</b> by a conveying of the news of things to come through a manuscript conveyed backwards to us, and which makes up the bulk of the novel; <b>6</b> by a near absence of tales set in the vast extrovert space-operatic reaches of the galaxy (see <a href="/entry/space_opera">Space Opera</a>), though visits by mentor figures <i>from</i> other planets &ndash; <a href="/entry/aliens">Alien</a> sages and/or <a href="/entry/secret_masters">Secret Masters</a> from <a href="/entry/mars">Mars</a> &ndash; are not infrequent, and <a href="/entry/invasion">Invasions</a> <i>from</i> space may occur; <b>7</b> by an absence of much sense of any penetrable frontier or portal and <b>8</b> by an expectable scarcity therefore of the kind of <a href="/entry/pulp">Pulp</a>-magazine-derived <a href="/entry/heroes">Hero</a> designed to penetrate <a href="/entry/space_opera">Space Opera</a> country beyond the wall or through the portal; <b>9</b> by, it follows, a fatal scarcity of venues or actants necessary to implement the monomyth -&ndash; the story of the male hero's journey into an unknown territory, his transformative victory-and-revelation in the new land, and his monarchical return with gifts &ndash; as popularized by Joseph Campbell (1904-1987) in <i>The Hero with a Thousand Faces</i> (<b>1949</b>), a narrative model deeply influential upon American <a href="/entry/genre_sf">Genre SF</a>; <b>10</b> by stories where the <a href="/entry/invention">Invention</a> of a <a href="/entry/scientists">Scientist</a> or <a href="/entry/mad_scientist">Mad Scientist</a> or ingenious young entrepreneur tends to be used not as a sign of Manifest Destiny to come, but as a blackmail <a href="/entry/weapons">Weapon</a> to create universal peace (see also <a href="/entry/pax_aeronautica">Pax Aeronautica</a>), or simply to take over the world; <b>11</b> by, it follows, a persistent deprecation of <a href="/entry/technology">Technological</a> fixes, which are seen as futile, or snares; <b>12</b> by a sense, particularly acute among the large cohort of Scientific-Romance authors devastated by active service during <a href="/entry/world_war_one">World War One</a>, that the establishment nostrumizing of <a href="/entry/religion">Religion</a> and <a href="/entry/politics">Politics</a> had been discredited for good in the aftermath of that planetary trauma, and that anything remotely and speciously resembling "progress" was fated to end in <a href="/entry/dystopias">Dystopia</a> or <a href="/entry/world_war_three">World War Three</a>,; and <b>13</b> might fairly be described <a href="/entry/satire">Satirically</a> by an observer (see <b>2</b>, <b>3</b>, <b>4</b> above) attentive to the sham of things (see also <a href="/entry/martian">Martian</a>); <b>14</b> by a sense that the tale is being delivered from a <i>podium</i>, quite possibly within a <a href="/entry/club_story">Club Story</a> frame, with the significance of the narrative passed on to us <i>in hindsight</i> by an almost visible lecturer, whose performance may deliberately fall short of the charismatic, as might be said of an author like Arthur C <a href="/entry/clarke_arthur_c">Clarke</a>, though not of Brian W <a href="/entry/aldiss_brian_w">Aldiss</a>; <b>15</b> by a sense that any intellectual discourse shaping a tale may be &ndash; as most famously in Aldous <a href="/entry/huxley_aldous">Huxley</a>'s <i>Brave New World</i> (<b>1932</b>) &ndash; subject to a dramatic debate, which the Devil often wins; <b>15</b> by a sense that if a tale <i>is</i> to end positively, its cast may come to rest in a <a href="/entry/pastoral">Pastoral</a> world conceivable as sufficient unto itself, rather than as a place to regroup in before re-entering the fray of the world; <b>17</b> by a cumulative sense that the tale being told, and the pessimism almost universally expressed about the course of history to come, are normally meant for and targeted to adult readers, and not as fiction for the young (see <a href="/entry/boys_papers">Boys' Papers</a>; <a href="/entry/childrens_sf">Children's SF</a>; <a href="/entry/edisonade">Edisonade</a>): this boundary marker, though at times indistinct, impacts on any selection of relevant texts to enumerate or discuss; and <b>18</b> helps explain the typical scientific romance's lack of patriotism.</p> <p>Exact figures are a matter of judgment, but of the more than 150 authors of the fantastic in English who as adults had experienced and survived the Great War, usually in active service, a significant number came to publish Scientific Romances, mostly in the years before <a href="/entry/world_war_two">World War Two</a>; many of these tales were implicitly or explicitly <a href="/entry/dystopias">Dystopian</a>, and in this sense contrarian to any "official" version of the world which proclaimed that the War had Ended War. Their authors cumulatively represent the Scientific Romance at its most successful and popular, an accomplishment proclaimed mainly in hindsight if only because the term itself was only applied intermittently during this period. </p> <p>Examples of a cataract of texts so multiply labelled are suggested here with some caution; but at the same time it may be a useful critical act to attempt to provide a definitional nest for a wide range of tales, which may not be as miscellaneous as they may have seemed at some point. Excluding late titles from earlier authors like H G <a href="/entry/wells_h_g">Wells</a> (see above) or Alfred <a href="/entry/ollivant_alfred">Ollivant</a>, examples of the Scientific Romance from this flush period between the wars &ndash; some deeply moving, some inane, many (though not all) written by male survivors of active service in the Great War, or women survivors of active immersion in a convulsively changing world &ndash; are surprisingly numerous. Not all may consciously or conspicuously expose some stigmata of that traumatic conflict, but a nuance of trauma arguably infuses even the most benevolent of these tales: so many of them, in the end, after the devastating lessons learned, so distrustful of the future.</p> <p>Books published to the end of the 1920s [for missing subtitles see individual entries] include Owen <a href="/entry/gregory_owen">Gregory</a>'s <i>Meccania, the Super State</i> (<b>1918</b>), Rose <a href="/entry/macaulay_rose">Macaulay</a>'s <i>What Not: A Prophetic Comedy</i> (<b>1918</b>), Oliver <a href="/entry/onions_oliver">Onions</a>'s <i>The New Moon</i> (<b>1918</b>) Martin <a href="/entry/swayne_martin">Swayne</a>'s <i>The Blue Germ</i> (<b>1918</b>), David <a href="/entry/lindsay_david">Lindsay</a>'s <i>A Voyage to Arcturus</i> (<b>1920</b>), Edward <a href="/entry/shanks_edward">Shanks</a>'s <i>The People of the Ruins: A Story of the English Revolution and After</i> (<b>1920</b>), Marie <a href="/entry/corelli_marie">Corelli</a>'s <i>The Secret Power</i> (<b>1921</b>), Cicely <a href="/entry/hamilton_cicely">Hamilton</a>'s <i>Theodore Savage</i> (<b>1922</b>), P Anderson <a href="/entry/graham_p_anderson">Graham</a>'s <i>The Collapse of Homo Sapiens</i> (<b>1923</b>), Ronald A <a href="/entry/knox_ronald_a">Knox</a>'s <i>Memories of the Future</i> (<b>1923</b>), E V <a href="/entry/odle_e_v">Odle</a>'s <i>The Clockwork Man</i> (<b>1923</b>), Martin <a href="/entry/hussingtree_martin">Hussingtree</a>'s <i>Konyetz</i> (<b>1924</b>), at least two stories in Hugh <a href="/entry/kingsmill_hugh">Kingsmill</a>'s <i>The Dawn's Delay</i> (coll <b>1924</b>), Victor <a href="/entry/macclure_victor">MacClure</a>'s <i>The Ark of the Covenant</i> (<b>1924</b>), Lance <a href="/entry/sieveking_lance">Sieveking</a>'s <i>The Ultimate Island</i> (<b>1924</b>), J Lionel <a href="/entry/tayler_j_lionel">Tayler</a>'s <i>The Last of my Race</i> (<b>1924</b>), S Fowler <a href="/entry/wright_s_fowler">Wright</a>'s <i>The Amphibians</i> (<b>1924</b>) and later works, Geoffrey <a href="/entry/faber_geoffrey">Faber</a>'s <i>Elnovia</i> (<b>1925</b>), Bohun <a href="/entry/lynch_bohun">Lynch</a>'s <i>Menace from the Moon</i> (<b>1925</b>), Gregory <a href="/entry/baxter_gregory">Baxter</a>'s <i>Blue Lightning</i> (<b>1926</b>), Guy <a href="/entry/dent_guy">Dent</a>'s <i>Emperor of the If</i> (<b>1926</b>), Shaw <a href="/entry/desmond_shaw">Desmond</a>'s <i>Ragnarok</i> (<b>1926</b>), Charlotte <a href="/entry/haldane_charlotte">Haldane</a>'s <i>Man's World</i> (<b>1926</b>), the Earl of Halsbury's <i>1944</i> (<b>1926</b>), C E <a href="/entry/jacomb_c_e">Jacomb</a>'s <i>And a New Earth</i> (<b>1926</b>), Muriel <a href="/entry/jaeger_muriel">Jaeger</a>'s <i>The Question Mark</i> (<b>1926</b>), William <a href="/entry/gerhardi_william">Gerhardi</a>'s <i>Jazz and Jasper: The Story of Adams and Eva</i> (<b>1928</b>), Francis D <a href="/entry/grierson_francis_d">Grierson</a>'s <i>Heart of the Moon</i> (<b>1928</b>), Hugh <a href="/entry/lofting_hugh">Lofting</a>'s <i>Doctor Dolittle in the Moon</i> (<b>1928</b>) and companion volumes, Edmund <a href="/entry/snell_edmund">Snell</a>'s <i>Kontrol</i> (<b>1928</b>), Robert <a href="/entry/nichols_robert">Nichols</a> and Maurice Brown's drama <i>Wings Over Europe</i> (<b>1929</b>), Edward <a href="/entry/knoblock_edward">Knoblock</a>'s <i>The Ant Heap</i> (<b>1929</b>), Roland <a href="/entry/pertwee_roland">Pertwee</a>'s <i>MW.XX.3.</i> (<b>1929</b>), Owen <a href="/entry/rutter_owen">Rutter</a>'s <i>Lucky Star</i> (<b>1929</b>), Neil <a href="/entry/bell_neil">Bell</a>'s <i>Precious Porcelain</i> (<b>1930</b>) and <i>The Gas War of 1940</i> (<b>1931</b>), both as by Miles, and William <a href="/entry/penmare_william">Penmare</a>'s <i>The Man Who Could Stop War</i> (<b>1929</b>).</p> <p>The 1930s saw an even larger number of releases: Bernard <a href="/entry/newman_bernard">Newman</a>'s <i>The Cavalry Came Through</i> (<b>1930</b>), set in the Great War and couched, unusually for a Scientific Romance, as an <a href="/entry/alternate_history">Alternate History</a>, Olaf <a href="/entry/stapledon_olaf">Stapledon</a>'s <i>Last and First Men</i> (<b>1930</b>) and other tales of <a href="/entry/evolution">Evolutionary</a> perspective, Aelfrida <a href="/entry/tillyard_aelfrida">Tillyard</a>'s <i>Concrete: A Story of Two Hundred Years Hence</i> (<b>1930</b>), Lionel <a href="/entry/britton_lionel">Britton</a>'s <i>Hunger and Love, Etc</i> (<b>1931</b>), John <a href="/entry/hargrave_john">Hargrave</a>'s <i>The Imitation Man</i> (<b>1931</b>), Stephen <a href="/entry/king-hall_stephen">King-Hall</a>'s <i>Post-War Pirate</i> (<b>1931</b>) and others, Walter <a href="/entry/owen_walter">Owen</a>'s genre-rimming <i>The Cross of Carl</i> (<b>1931</b>), Charles <a href="/entry/duff_charles">Duff</a>'s <i>Mind Products Limited</i> (<b>1932</b>), George C <a href="/entry/foster_george_c">Foster</a>'s <i>Awakening</i> (<b>1932</b>), John <a href="/entry/gloag_john">Gloag</a>'s <i>Tomorrow's Yesterday</i> (<b>1932</b>), Aldous <a href="/entry/huxley_aldous">Huxley</a>'s <i>Brave New World</i> (<b>1932</b>), Harold <a href="/entry/nicolson_harold">Nicolson</a>'s <i>Public Faces</i> (<b>1932</b>), James <a href="/entry/ray_james">Ray</a>'s <i>The Scene Is Changed</i> (<b>1932</b>), Graham <a href="/entry/seton_graham">Seton</a>'s <i>Eye for an Eye</i> (<b>1932</b>), Francis H <a href="/entry/sibson_francis_h">Sibson</a>'s <i>The Survivors</i> (<b>1932</b>), George <a href="/entry/slocombe_george">Slocombe</a>'s <i>Dictator</i> (<b>1932</b>), Michael <a href="/entry/arlen_michael">Arlen</a>'s <i>Man's Mortality</i> (<b>1933</b>), John <a href="/entry/collier_john">Collier</a>'s <i>Tom's A-Cold</i> (<b>1933</b>), John <a href="/entry/kendall_john">Kendall</a>'s <i>Unborn Tomorrow</i> (<b>1933</b>), M E <a href="/entry/mitchell_m_e">Mitchell</a>'s <i>"Yet in my Flesh &ndash;"</i> (<b>1933</b>), Thomas F <a href="/entry/tweed_thomas_f">Tweed</a>'s <i>Rinehard</i> (<b>1933</b>), Osbert <a href="/entry/sitwell_osbert">Sitwell</a>'s <i>Miracle on Sinai</i> (<b>1933</b>), C S <a href="/entry/forester_c_s">Forester</a>'s <i>The Peacemaker</i> (<b>1934</b>), James <a href="/entry/hilton_james">Hilton</a>'s <i>Lost Horizon</i> (<b>1934</b>), F G <a href="/entry/hurrell_f_g">Hurrell</a>'s <i>John Lillibud</i> (<b>1934</b>), Alan <a href="/entry/llewellyn_alun">Llewellyn</a>'s <i>The Strange Invaders</i> (<b>1934</b>), J Leslie <a href="/entry/mitchell_j_leslie">Mitchell</a>'s <i>Gay Hunter</i> (<b>1934</b>), Leslie <a href="/entry/reid_leslie">Reid</a>'s <i>Cauldron Bubble</i> (<b>1934</b>), Dennis <a href="/entry/wheatley_dennis">Wheatley</a>'s <i>Black August</i> (<b>1934</b>), T H <a href="/entry/white_t_h">White</a>'s <i>Earth Stopped</i> (<b>1934</b>), Stella <a href="/entry/benson_stella">Benson</a>'s <i>Mundos: An Unfinished Novel</i> (<b>1935</b>), F Le Gros <a href="/entry/clark_f_le_gros">Clark</a>'s <i>Between Two Men</i> (<b>1935</b>), James <a href="/entry/corbett_james">Corbett</a>'s <i>Devil-Man from Mars</i> (<b>1935</b>), Geoffrey <a href="/entry/dearmer_geoffrey">Dearmer</a>'s <i>They Chose to Be Birds</i> (<b>1935</b>), Harry <a href="/entry/edmonds_harry">Edmonds</a>'s <i>The Professor's Last Experiment</i> (<b>1935</b>), Susan <a href="/entry/ertz_susan">Ertz</a>'s <i>Woman Alive</i> (<b>1935</b>), Elizabeth Kay <a href="/entry/gresswell_elise_kay">Gresswell</a>'s <i>When Yvonne Was Dictator</i> (<b>1935</b>), Claude <a href="/entry/houghton_claude">Houghton</a>'s <i>This Was Ivor Trent</i> (<b>1935</b>), Joseph <a href="/entry/oneill_joseph">O'Neill</a>'s <i>Land Under England</i> (<b>1935</b>), Herbert <a href="/entry/read_herbert">Read</a>'s <i>The Green Child: A Romance</i> (<b>1935</b>), Barrington <a href="/entry/beverley_barrington">Beverley</a>'s <i>The Space Raiders</i> (<b>1936</b>), A G <a href="/entry/macdonell_a_g">MacDonell</a>'s <i>Lords and Masters</i> (<b>1936</b>), Joseph <a href="/entry/macleod_joseph_gordon">Macleod</a>'s <i>Overture to Cambridge</i> (<b>1936</b>), John <a href="/entry/palmer_john">Palmer</a>'s <i>The Hesperides: A Looking-Glass Fugue</i> (<b>1936</b>), Wayland <a href="/entry/smith_wayland">Smith</a>'s <i>The Machine Stops</i> (<b>1936</b>), Barbara <a href="/entry/wootton_barbara">Wootton</a>'s <i>London's Burning</i> (<b>1936</b>), Geoffrey <a href="/entry/household_geoffrey">Household</a>'s <i>The Third Hour</i> (<b>1937</b>), F L <a href="/entry/lucas_f_l">Lucas</a>'s <i>The Woman Cloaked with the Sun and Other Stories</i> (coll of linked stories <b>1937</b>) which climaxes in the <a href="/entry/end_of_the_world_the_film_2">End of the World</a>, Storm <a href="/entry/jameson_storm">Jameson</a>'s <i>The World Ends</i> (<b>1937</b>) as by William Lamb, A M <a href="/entry/low_a_m">Low</a>'s <i>Mars Breaks Through</i> (<b>1937</b>), William J <a href="/entry/makin_william_j">Makin</a>'s <i>Murder at Full Moon</i> (<b>1937</b>), C S <a href="/entry/lewis_c_s">Lewis</a>'s <i>Out of the Silent Planet</i> (<b>1938</b>) and (more comprehensively) its second sequel, <i>That Hideous Strength</i> (<b>1945</b>), Andrew <a href="/entry/marvell_andrew">Marvell</a>'s <i>Minimum Man: Or, Time to Be Gone</i> (<b>1938</b>) and others, H M <a href="/entry/raleigh_h_m">Raleigh</a>'s <i>The Machinations of Dr Grue</i> (<b>1938</b>), Philip George <a href="/entry/chadwick_philip_george">Chadwick</a>'s <i>The Death Guard</i> (<b>1939</b>), R C <a href="/entry/sherriff_r_c">Sherriff</a>'s <i>The Hopkins Manuscript</i> (<b>1939</b>), Herbert <a href="/entry/best_herbert">Best</a>'s <i>The Twenty-Fifth Hour</i> (<b>1940</b>), Ian <a href="/entry/macdougall_ian">MacDougall</a>'s <i>A Trip to Venus</i> (<b>1940</b>), Alfred <a href="/entry/noyes_alfred">Noyes</a>'s <i>The Last Man</i> (<b>1940</b>), Donald <a href="/entry/suddaby_donald">Suddaby</a>'s <i>Lost Men in the Grass</i> (<b>1940</b>) as by Griff. </p> <p>Later examples from authors who experienced the Great War include J Jefferson <a href="/entry/farjeon_j_jefferson">Farjeon</a>'s <i>Death of a World</i> (<b>1948</b>), Robert <a href="/entry/graves_robert">Graves</a>'s <i>Watch the North Wind Rise</i> (<b>1949</b>), Ronald <a href="/entry/fraser_ronald">Fraser</a>'s <i>Beetle's Career</i> (<b>1951</b>) after many fantasies, Lord <a href="/entry/dunsany_lord">Dunsany</a>'s <i>The Last Revolution</i> (<b>1952</b>) and <i>The Pleasures of a Futuroscope</i> (written 1955; <b>2003</b>), Charles <a href="/entry/morgan_charles">Morgan</a>'s <i>The Burning Glass</i> (<b>1953</b>), L P <a href="/entry/hartley_l_p">Hartley</a>'s <i>Facial Justice</i> (<b>1960</b>), Naomi <a href="/entry/mitchison_naomi">Mitchison</a>'s <i>Memoirs of a Spacewoman</i> (<b>1962</b>), J B S <a href="/entry/haldane_j_b_s">Haldane</a>'s <i>The Man With Two Memories</i> (<b>1976</b>), Owen <a href="/entry/barfield_owen">Barfield</a>'s <i>Night Operation</i> (1983-1984 <i>Towards</i>; <b>2008</b>); and others. </p> <p>It should be noted that the proportion of women authors of Scientific Romances, certainly over the significant decades separating the two great twentieth-century world wars, is notably greater than those conspicuously engaged in American <a href="/entry/genre_sf">Genre SF</a> a few years later (see <a href="/entry/feminism">Feminism</a>; <a href="/entry/women_sf_writers">Women SF Writers</a>). Those with entries in this encyclopedia (most already mentioned above) include Stella <a href="/entry/benson_stella">Benson</a>, Margaret Maud Brash writing as John <a href="/entry/kendall_john">Kendall</a>, Katharine <a href="/entry/burdekin_katharine">Burdekin</a>, Sarah <a href="/entry/campion_sarah">Campion</a>, Susan <a href="/entry/ertz_susan">Ertz</a>, Elizabeth Kay <a href="/entry/gresswell_elise_kay">Gresswell</a>, Charlotte <a href="/entry/haldane_charlotte">Haldane</a>, Cicely <a href="/entry/hamilton_cicely">Hamilton</a>, Muriel <a href="/entry/jaeger_muriel">Jaeger</a>, Storm <a href="/entry/jameson_storm">Jameson</a>, Rose <a href="/entry/macaulay_rose">Macaulay</a>, Naomi <a href="/entry/mitchison_naomi">Mitchison</a>, E Arnot <a href="/entry/robertson_e_arnot">Robertson</a>, Vita <a href="/entry/sackville-west_v">Sackville-West</a>, Aelfrida <a href="/entry/tillyard_aelfrida">Tillyard</a>, E H Tisot writing as William <a href="/entry/penmare_william">Penmare</a>, and Barbara <a href="/entry/wootton_barbara">Wootton</a>.</p> <p>The nonfiction works of authors like J D <a href="/entry/bernal_j_d">Bernal</a> and Haldane &ndash; both of which appear in the <a href="/entry/to-day_and_to-morrow">To-day and To-morrow</a> series, short texts of speculative nonfiction that share tone and content with much Scientific Romance &ndash; were directly influential on the form during the 1920s. It might also be suggested that the greatest author of the nonfiction Scientific Romance was Arnold J Toynbee (1889-1975) for the deterministic cycles into which he fit past history in <i>A Study of History</i> (<b>1934-1954</b> 10vols) (see <a href="/entry/pseudoscience">Pseudoscience</a>) and <i>Civilization on Trial</i> (<b>1948</b>), in which he used his model to forecast our fate. </p> <p>A few more recent writers have found the term a convenient rubric for off-piste works, or for subversive presentations of a clearly <i>faux</i> nostalgia, many <a href="/entry/steampunk">Steampunk</a> tales in particular commodifying the visions of the classic Scientific Romance into boutique shop windows bricolaging the arcade of the past. Michael <a href="/entry/moorcock_michael">Moorcock</a>'s <b>Nomad of the Time Stream</b> sequence, beginning with <i>The Warlord of the Air: A Scientific Romance</i> (<b>1971</b>), both exemplifies and critiques this tendency. Authors taking more general inspiration from the form include George <a href="/entry/orwell_george">Orwell</a> for <i>Nineteen Eighty-Four</i> (<b>1949</b>), Arthur C <a href="/entry/clarke_arthur_c">Clarke</a> for <i>Childhood's End</i> (<b>1954</b>), Gore <a href="/entry/vidal_gore">Vidal</a> for <i>Messiah</i> (<b>1954</b>), Ian <a href="/entry/watson_ian">Watson</a> for <i>The Embedding</i> (<b>1973</b>) and many subsequent tales, Christopher <a href="/entry/priest_christopher">Priest</a> for <i>The Space Machine</i> (<b>1976</b>), Brian <a href="/entry/stableford_brian_m">Stableford</a> for <i>The Walking Shadow</i> (<b>1979</b>), whose subtitle, added later, is "A Promethean Scientific Romance", and his <b>Emortality</b> sequence, and many others, Kim Stanley <a href="/entry/robinson_kim_stanley">Robinson</a> for <i>The Memory of Whiteness</i> (<b>1985</b>), <i>Red Moon</i> (<b>2018</b>), and <i>The Ministry for the Future</i> (<b>2020</b>), Brian W <a href="/entry/aldiss_brian_w">Aldiss</a> for the <b>Helliconia</b> series, Ronald <a href="/entry/wright_ronald">Wright</a> for <i>A Scientific Romance</i> (<b>1997</b>), which he explicitly links to Richard <a href="/entry/jefferies_richard">Jefferies</a>'s <i>After London; Or, Wild England</i> (<b>1885</b>) and H G <a href="/entry/wells_h_g">Wells</a>'s <i>The Time Machine</i> (<b>1895</b>), along with several other cites, Adam <a href="/entry/roberts_adam">Roberts</a>'s <a href="/entry/thought_experiment">Thought Experiment</a> novels beginning with <i>Salt</i> (<b>2000</b>), Stephen <a href="/entry/baxter_stephen">Baxter</a>'s <i>Evolution</i> (<b>2002</b>), and in fact almost all his work. More recent examples, from non-UK authors, include Joanna <a href="/entry/kavenna_joanna">Kavenna</a>'s <i>The Birth of Love</i> (<b>2010</b>) and <i>A Field Guide to Reality</i> (<b>2016</b>), where discourse governs storyline; and Steven <a href="/entry/erikson_steven">Erikson</a>'s first non-fantasy novel, <i>Rejoice, a Knife to the Heart: A Novel of First Contact</i> (<b>2018</b>), which clearly amalgamates topoi from both sf and the Scientific Romance. [BS/DRL/JC]</p> <p><b>see also:</b> <a href="/entry/forgotten_futures">Forgotten Futures</a>.</p> <p><b>further reading</b></p> <ul class="x"> <li>Brian <a href="/entry/stableford_brian_m">Stableford</a>. <em><a href="/sfeshop.php?field-keywords=Scientific+Romance+in+Britain+1890-1950&field-author=Stableford+Brian+M" class="link-amazon" target="_blank">Scientific Romance in Britain 1890-1950</a></em> (London: Fourth Estate, <b>1985</b>) [nonfiction: hb/uncredited]</li> <li>Brian <a href="/entry/stableford_brian_m">Stableford</a>. <em><a href="/sfeshop.php?field-keywords=The+New+Atlantis+A+Narrative+History+of&field-author=Stableford+Brian+M" class="link-amazon" target="_blank">The New Atlantis: A Narrative History of Scientific Romance: Volume I: The Origins of Scientific Romance</a></em> (Cabin John, Maryland: Wildside Press, <b>2016</b>) [nonfiction: first of four volumes: <b>New Atlantis</b>: pb/uncredited]</li> <li>Brian <a href="/entry/stableford_brian_m">Stableford</a>. <em><a href="/sfeshop.php?field-keywords=The+New+Atlantis+A+Narrative+History+of&field-author=Stableford+Brian+M" class="link-amazon" target="_blank">The New Atlantis: A Narrative History of Scientific Romance: Volume II: The Emergence of Scientific Romance</a></em> (Cabin John, Maryland: Wildside Press, <b>2016</b>) [nonfiction: second of four volumes: <b>New Atlantis</b>: pb/uncredited]</li> <li>Brian <a href="/entry/stableford_brian_m">Stableford</a>. <em><a href="/sfeshop.php?field-keywords=The+New+Atlantis+A+Narrative+History+of&field-author=Stableford+Brian+M" class="link-amazon" target="_blank">The New Atlantis: A Narrative History of Scientific Romance: Volume III: The Resurgence of Scientific Romance</a></em> (Cabin John, Maryland: Wildside Press, <b>2016</b>) [nonfiction: third of four volumes: <b>New Atlantis</b>: pb/uncredited]</li> <li>Brian <a href="/entry/stableford_brian_m">Stableford</a>. <em><a href="/sfeshop.php?field-keywords=The+New+Atlantis+A+Narrative+History+of&field-author=Stableford+Brian+M" class="link-amazon" target="_blank">The New Atlantis: A Narrative History of Scientific Romance: Volume IV: The Decadence of Scientific Romance</a></em> (Cabin John, Maryland: Wildside Press, <b>2016</b>) [nonfiction: last of four volumes: <b>New Atlantis</b>: pb/uncredited]</li> <li>Brian <a href="/entry/stableford_brian_m">Stableford</a>, editor. <em><a href="/sfeshop.php?field-keywords=Scientific+Romance+An+International+Anthology+of&field-author=Stableford+Brian+M" class="link-amazon" target="_blank">Scientific Romance: An International Anthology of Pioneering Science Fiction</a></em> (New York: Dover Publications, <b>2017</b>) [anth: pb/]</li> <li>Mike <a href="/entry/ashley_mike">Ashley</a>. <em><a href="/sfeshop.php?field-keywords=Yesterday+Tomorrows+The+Story+of+Classic&field-author=Ashley+Mike" class="link-amazon" target="_blank">Yesterday's Tomorrows: The Story of Classic British Science Fiction in 100 Books</a></em> (London: British Library, <b>2020</b>) [nonfiction: hb/various artists]</li> </ul> <p><b>links</b></p> <ul class="x"> <li><a target="_blank" href="http://fantastic-writers-and-the-great-war.com/">Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers in the Great War</a></li> <li><a target="_blank" href="https://sf-encyclopedia.com/fe/"><em>The Encyclopedia of Fantasy</em></a>: <a target="_blank" href="https://sf-encyclopedia.com/fe/horizon_of_expectations">Horizon of Expectations</a>; <a target="_blank" href="https://sf-encyclopedia.com/fe/taproot_texts">Taproot Texts</a>.</li> </ul> <p><b>previous versions of this entry</b></p> <ul><li><a href='https://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/scientific_romance' target='_blank'>Internet Archive</a></li></ul><br /><br /></article></div> <div class="sideBarsWrapper"> <div class="sideBarsColsWrapper clearfix"> <div class="column sideBar12 clearfix"> <div class="columnForm"><aside id="blogFeed" class="widget"> <div class="content STeditorial clearfix"> <h2>Recently visited entries<span style="background:url(/images/thingSFE2.png) !important"></span></h2><ul style='width: 50%; float: left;'> </ul> <p align=center style="float:right; padding-top:20px; padding-bottom:20px;">ISSN 3049-7612<br /> <a href="/facts.php?id=logo"> <img src="/images/VitMan.gif" width=150 height=150 title="Click for larger version of this SFE logo"></a><br /> <b><a href="/donate.php"><img src="/images/Paypal-Donate.gif" WIDTH="92" HEIGHT="26" BORDER="0" /></a><br /><a href="/">Home/Welcome page</a></b></p><div style="margin-bottom:10px;"></div></div> </aside><aside id="blogFeed" class="widget"> <div class="content STeditorial clearfix"> <h2><i>SFE</i> Special Features<span></span></h2><p style="margin-top: 10px;"><input type="button" value="What&rsquo;s New" style="width: 150px !important;" class="button primary" onclick="window.location.href='/whatsnew.php'">&nbsp; 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