Science Fiction Studies
Issue 86, March 2002
Issue 87, July 2002
Issue 88, November 2002
Issue 89, March 2003
Issue 90, July 2003
Issue 91, November 2003
Issue 92, March 2004
Issue 93, July 2004
Issue 94, November 2004
Issue 95, March 2005
Issue 104, March 2008
Issue 105, July 2008
Issue 106, November 2008
Issue 107, March 2009
Issue 108, July 2009
Issue 109, November 2009
Issue 110, March 2010
Issue 111, July 2010
Issue 112, November 2010

edited by Various
Issue 95 signed by
Gregory Benford

Published by SF-TH Inc
at DePauw University

Description: 19 trade paperback format magazines issues published between 2002 and 2010 The run is missing two issues from 2005 and the six issues from 2006 and 2007. Issue 95 is signed by contributor Gregory Benford without inscription or personalization at his contribution. Please note that these are quality productions, using high quality paper and covers. As a result they are quite heavy in bulk, these weigh over 12 pounds before packaging. The best way to ship these as they cannot be shipped by media mail (cannot be used for magazines) will be by FedEx ground service.

Table of Contents:

#86 = Volume 29, Part 1 = March 2002
• ARTICLES
•• Arthur B. Evans. Gustave Le Rouge, Pioneer of Early French Science Fiction
•• Umberto Rossi. From Dick to Lethem: The Dickian Legacy, Postmodernism, and Avant-Pop in Jonathan Lethem’s Amnesia Moon
•• Anthony Enns. Mediality and Mourning in Stanislaw Lem’s Solaris and His Master’s Voice
•• Neal Bukeavich. "Are We Adopting the Right Measures to Cope?": Ecocrisis in John Brunner’s Stand on Zanzibar
•• Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr. On the Grotesque in Science Fiction
• REVIEW-ESSAY
•• Rob Latham. A Tendentious Tendency in SF Criticism: Parrinder’s Learning from Other Worlds, Moylan’s Scraps of the Untainted Sky.
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Bickley’s Hong Kong Invaded! A ’97 Nightmare (Everett F. Bleiler)
•• Booker’s American Science Fiction and the Roots of Postmodernism, 1946-1964 (Carl Freedman)
•• Broderick’s Earth is But a Star: Excursions Through Science Fiction to the Far Future (Janeen Webb)
•• Hellekson’s The Science Fiction of Cordwainer Smith (CM)
•• Joshi’s The Modern Weird Tale (Greg Beatty)
•• Lancaster’s Interacting with BABYLON 5 (Nicholas Birns)
•• Morawetz’s Identity and the Art of Transformational Makeup (Allen Kupfer)
•• Reid’s Ray Bradbury: A Critical Companion (Janice M. Bogstad)
•• Rochelle’s The Rhetoric of Myth in the Fiction of Ursula K. Le Guin (Charles Nicol)
•• Sandison and Dingley’s Histories of the Future (ABE)
•• Simpson’s A Completely and Utterly Unauthorized Guide to THE HITCHHIKER’S GUIDE (Michael-Anne Rubenstien)
•• Swirski’s Poe, Lem, and Explorations in Aesthetics, Cognitive Science, and Literary Knowledge (Scott Ash)
•• Wright’s Comic Book Nation (Ray Mescallado)
•• Yanerella’s Contemporary Science Fiction and the Ecological Imagination (Bob Mesle)
•• Gailor’s Il genere della invasion story nella narrativa inglese (Salvatore Proietti)
•• Rispoli’s La fantascienza di Philip K. Dick (Salvatore Proietti)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• Coding Out the USA: Oshii’s Avalon (ICR)
•• Wells’s Numerology (Darko Suvin)
•• E-Files: A Discussion of The Lord of the Rings (A, B, C)
•• Science Fiction in Greece (Domna Pastourmatzi)
•• Calls for Papers, Conferences, Awards, and other Announcements
•• Notes on Contributors

#87 = Volume 29, Part 2 = July 2002
• ARTICLES
•• George Slusser and Danièle Chatelain. Conveying Unknown Worlds: Patterns of Communication in Science Fiction
•• Philippe Mather. Figures of Estrangement in Science Fiction Film
•• Cornelius Partsch. Paul Scheerbart and the Art of Science Fiction
•• Richard Swope. Science Fiction Cinema and the Crime of Social-Spatial Reality
• REVIEW-ESSAYS
•• Patrick A. McCarthy. A Mixed Bag: New Editions of H.G. Wells by Ruddick, Stover, and Bear
•• Carl Freedman. Hail Mary: New Editions and Studies of Mary Shelley by MacDonald/Scherf, McWhir, Bennett/Curran, Eberle-Sinatra, and Williams
•• Tom Moylan. Utopia, Postcolonialism, and Postmodernism: Pordzik’s Quest for Postcolonial Utopia
•• Gary Westfahl. A Civilized Frontier: Barretts’ Star Trek
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Arndt/Peter/Wünnenberg’s Hyperorganismen (Anthony Enns)
•• Chion’s Kubrick’s Cinema Odyssey (Mark Bould)
•• Hall/Mallett’s Pilgrims and Pioneers (Marleen S. Barr)
•• Fredrick/McBride’s Women Among the Inklings (Elaine Good)
•• Haut’s The Hidden Library of Tanith Lee (Lillian Marks Heldreth)
•• Hunt/Lenz’s Alternative Worlds in Fantasy Fiction (Rebecca Fraser)
•• Fischer’s Science Fiction Film Directors, 1895-1998 (RL)
•• Slusser/Parrinder/Chatelain’s H.G. Wells’s Perennial TIME MACHINE (Nicholas Ruddick)
•• Smith/Higgins/Parker/Lightfoot’s Science Fiction and Organization (Marian Parish)
•• Sturgeon’s A Saucer of Loneliness (Aaron Parrett)
•• New Editions of Verne, Doyle, Wells, and Burroughs (David Seed)
•• Grant’s The Films of David Cronenberg and Beard’s The Cinema of David Cronenberg (Suzie S.F. Young)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• On the British SF Boom (Mark Bould)
•• The Lord of the Rings (John Bishop)
•• Throwing the Book (Marleen S. Barr)
•• On The FRANKENSTEIN Notebooks (David Ketterer)
•• The Nation and Star Trek (CM)
•• SF and Old Babylon (CM)
•• Calls for Papers, Conferences, Online Sites, and other Announcements
•• Notes on Contributors

#88 = Volume 29, Part 3 = November 2002
• SPECIAL ISSUE: JAPANESE SCIENCE FICTION
• Edited by TATSUMI Takayuki, Christopher Bolton, and Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr.
• ARTICLES
•• Christopher Bolton. Editorial Introduction. The Borders of Japanese Science Fiction
•• Susan Napier, Tatsumi Takayuki, Kotani Mari, and Otobe Junko: An Interview with KOMATSU Sakyô
•• ABE Kôbô. Two Essays on Science Fiction
•• SHIBANO Takumi. "Collective Reason": A Proposal
•• Miri Nakamura. Horror and Machines in Prewar Japan: The Mechanical Uncanny in Yumeno Kyûsaku’s Dogura magura (Text removed at request of author)*
•• Thomas Schnellbächer. Has the Empire Sunk Yet?—The Pacific in Japanese Science Fiction (Text removed at request of author)*
•• KOTANI Mari. Space, Body, and Aliens in Japanese Women’s Science Fiction (Text removed at request of author)*
•• Susan J. Napier. When the Machines Stop: Fantasy, Reality, and Terminal Identity in Neon Genesis Evangelion and Serial Experiments Lain (Text removed at request of author)*
•• Sharalyn Orbaugh. Sex and the Single Cyborg: Japanese Popular Culture Experiments in Subjectivity (Text removed at request of author)*
•• Christopher Bolton. The Mecha’s Blind Spot: Patlabor 2 and the Phenomenology of Anime (Text removed at request of author)*
•• TATSUMI Takayuki. Editorial Afterword. A Soft Time Machine: From Translation to Transfiguration (Text removed at request of author)*
• REVIEW-ESSAYS
•• William O. Gardner. Attack of the Phallic Girls: SAITO Tamaki’s Sentô bishôjô no seishin bunseki (Fighting Beauties: A Psychoanalysis)
•• Carl Silvio. Anime, Both Global and Local: Susan J. Napier’s Anime from Akira to Princess Mononoke
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Clarke’s British Future Fiction, 1700-1914 (Paul Alkon)
•• Boon’s New Essays on the Work of Kurt Vonnegut (Scott Ash)
•• McKenna’s Utopia: A Pragmatist and Feminist Perspective (JG)
•• Hollinger/Gordon’s Edging into the Future: Science Fiction and Contemporary Cultural Transformation (N. Katherine Hayles)
•• Makinen’s Feminist Popular Fiction (Nancy St. Clair)
•• Mead’s Encyclopedia of Jack Vance (Tom Shippey)
•• Patterson/Thornton’s Critical Perspectives on Robert A. Heinlein’s Stranger in a Strange Land (CM)
•• Rottensteiner’s The Best of Austrian Science Fiction (Stefan Ekman)
•• Sardar/Cubitt’s Aliens R Us: The Other in SF (Mark Bould)
•• Shapiro’s Atomic Bomb Cinema (Carl Freedman)
•• Weil/Wolfe’s Harlan Ellison: The Edge of Forever (Michael Levy)
•• Westfahl/Slusser/Plummer’s Unearthly Visions (Joe Sanders)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• Cordwainer Smith in Japan (Alan C. Elms)
•• Man the Traveler (Brian W. Aldiss)
•• The Golden Age is Now (Paul Kincaid, Mark Bould)
•• Star Trek in American Studies (Lincoln Geraghty)
•• Reluctant Pilgrim? (David Ketterer)
•• Gibson SF Collection (Christine Mains)
•• Not (Yet) the Droids We’re Looking For (CM)
•• Calls for Papers and other Announcements

#89 = Volume 30, Part 1 = March 2003
• INTERVIEW
•• Fiona Kelleghan. War of the World-Views: A Conversation with James Morrow
• ARTICLE ABSTRACTS
•• Aaron Dziubinskyj. The Birth of Science Fiction in Spanish America
•• David Seed. H.G. Wells and the Liberating Atom
•• Anindita Banerjee. Electricity: Science Fiction and Modernity in Early Twentieth-Century Russia
•• Graham Murphy. Post/Humanity and the Interstitial: A Glorification of Possibility in Gibson’s Bridge Sequence
• REVIEW-ESSAYS
•• Peter Fitting. Narrating Utopian Space: Wegner’s Imaginary Communities
•• Joe Sanders. Oh Yeah? Who Says So? Card’s The Best Science Fiction of the Century, Hills’s Fan Cultures, and Westfahl/Slusser’s Science Fiction, Canonization, Marginalization and the Academy
•• Gary Westfahl. Three Decades that Shook the World: Ashley’s The Science-Fiction Pulp Magazines, Price’s Memories of the Pulp Era, and Stover’s Science Fiction from Wells to Heinlein
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Baudrillard’s The Vital Illusion, Kraus/Auer’s Simulacrum America, and Smith’s Fatal Theories for Postmodernity (David Banash)
•• Forsström’s Possible Worlds: The Idea of Happiness in the Utopian Vision of Louis-Sébastien Mercier (ABE)
•• Jones’s Psychedelic Decadence and Mayer’s Artificial Africas (RL)
•• Kalat’s The Strange Case of Dr. Mabuse and Glassy’s The Biology of Science Fiction Cinema (David A. Kirby)
•• Latham’s Consuming Youth: Vampires, Cyborgs, and the Culture of Consumption (Roger Luckhurst)
•• Lindskoog’s Sleuthing C.S. Lewis and Honda’s The Imaginative World of C.S. Lewis (Carl Freedman)
•• Pierson’s Special Effects: Still in Search of Wonder (Allan C. Kupfer)
•• Sawyer/Seed’s Speaking Science Fiction (Pawel Frelik)
•• Server’s Encyclopedia of Pulp Fiction Writers (RL)
•• Vieth’s Screening Science: Contexts, Texts, and Science in Fifties Science Fiction Film (Marian Parish)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• Japanese and Russian SF (Brian W. Aldiss)
•• Apologia pro Anthologia Sua (I.F. Clarke)
•• Reply to I.F. Clarke (Paul K. Alkon)
•• Non-Pilgrim? (Lyman Tower Sargent)
•• On the Errant "H" (CM)
•• Cultures of Technology (Roger Luckhurst)
•• SF as American Icon (Elisabeth Kraus)
•• New Australian Radio Program, Speculation (Lilitu Babalon)
•• SFRA Review Seeks Co-Editor (Mike Levy)
•• Letters from PMAL (CM)

#90 = Volume 30, Part 2 = July 2003
• SOCIAL SCIENCE FICTION
• Edited by Neil Gerlach, Sheryl N. Hamilton, and Rob Latham•
• ARTICLES
•• Neil Gerlach and Sheryl N. Hamilton. Introduction: A History of Social Science Fiction
•• Symposium on Social SF: Tom Moylan, Arthur and Marilouise Kroker, Carl Freedman, and Bill Bogard
•• Samuel Gerald Collins. Sail On! Sail On!: Anthropology, Science Fiction, and the Enticing Future
•• Andrew Milner. Utopia and Science Fiction in Raymond Williams
•• J.P. Telotte. Doing Science in Machine Age Horror: The Mummy’s Case
•• Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr. Science Fiction and Empire
•• Diane Nelson. A Social Science Fiction of Fevers, Delirium, and Discovery: The Calculta Chromosome, the Colonial Laboratory, and the Postcolonial New Human
•• Sheryl N. Hamilton. Traces of the Future: Biotechnology, Science Fiction, and the Media
• REVIEW-ESSAYS
•• Veronica Hollinger. The Girls Who Were Plugged In: Larbalestier’s The Battle of the Sexes in Science Fiction
•• Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr. Lucid Dreams, or Flightless Birds on Rooftops? Historical Materialism’s Symposium on Marxism and Fantasy
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Cousin de Grainville’s The Last Man (Brian W. Aldiss)
•• Flanagan/Booth’s reload: Rethinking Women and Cyberculture (JG)
•• Grenville’s Experiments in Cyborg Culture (Christopher Bolton)
•• Hayles’s Writing Machines (John Scheckter) 311
•• Kaveney’s Reading the Vampire Slayer and Wilcox/Lavery’s What’s at Stake in BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER (Nicholas Birns)
•• Kitchin/Kneale’s Geographies of Science Fiction (Andrew M. Butler)
•• Pettman’s After the Orgy and Fernbach’s Fantasies of Fetishism: From Decadence to the Post-Human (Simone Weil Davis)
•• Kolko/Nakamura/Rodman’s Race in Cyberspace (Doris Witt)
•• Lucanio/Coville’s Smokin’ Rockets: The Romance of Technology in American Film, Radio and Television 1945-1962 (Richard D. Erlich)
•• Meyers’s Narratives of the Female Gothic Experience (Nicola Nixon)
•• Ryan’s Cyberspace Textuality: Computer Technology and Literary Theory (VH)
•• Sanz’s Dinosaur Mythology and Popular Culture (Mark Bould)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE••
•• The Sociology of Science Fiction (Brian Stableford)
•• Ninsei Street, Chiba City, in Gibson’s Neuromancer (Ian Lancashire)
•• Hong Kong 2003 (VH)
•• Special Issue of Rhizomes (Davin Heckman)
•• SFRA Award Winners (CM)
•• ICFA 2003 (JG)
•• In Memoriam: Jacques Chambon (Jean-Claude Dunyach)
•• Science Fiction Book Club’s Top Ten (CM)
•• More’s Utopia Donated to the Eaton Collection (CM)
•• Calls for Papers and Other Announcements

#91 = Volume 30, Part 3 = November 2003
• SPECIAL ISSUE: THE BRITISH SF BOOM
• Edited by Mark Bould, Andrew M. Butler, and Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr.
• INTERVIEW
•• Joan Gordon. Reveling in Genre: An Interview with China Miéville
• ARTICLES
•• Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr. Editorial Introduction
•• Andrew M. Butler. Thirteen Ways of Looking at the British Boom
•• Mark Bould. What Kind of Monster Are You?, Situating the Boom
•• Roger Luckhurst. Cultural Governance, New Labor, and the British SF Boom
•• Matt Hills. Counterfictions in the Work of Kim Newman: Rewriting Gothic SF as “Alternate-Story Stories”
•• Joan Gordon. Hybridity, Heterotopia, and Mateship in China Miéville’s Perdido Street Station
•• Stephen Baxter. Baby Boomers: Writers and their Origins
•• Mark Bould and Andrew M. Butler, eds. Voices on the Boom
•• Andrew M. Butler. Towards a Reading List of the British Boom
• REVIEW ESSAYS
•• Aaron Parrett. Alternative Worlds: Burroughs’s Pellucidar, Hyne’s The Lost Continent, and Wells’s The War in the Air
•• Ruth Berman. The Wizardry of Oz: Rogers’s L. Frank Baum, Hearn’s The Annotated Wizard of Oz, Dighe’s The Historian’s Wizard of Oz, and Swartz’s Oz Before the Rainbow
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Brigg’s The Span of Mainstream and Science Fiction (Neal Easterbrook)
•• Dick’s The Man Who Japed, The Zap Gun, and Counter-Clock World (Aaron Parrett)
•• Hintz/Ostry’s Utopian and Dystopian Writing for Children and Young Adults (Farah Mendlesohn)
•• Mackay’s The Yellow Wave (Russell Blackford)
•• Molina-Gavilán’s Ciencia Ficción En Español (Pedro Jorge Romero)
•• Rosenberg/Hixon/Scapple/White’s Diana Wynne Jones (Maureen Kincaid Speller)
•• Secrest’s The Fiction of Walter M. Miller, Jr. (David N. Samuelson)
•• Schakel’s Imagination and the Arts in C.S. Lewis (Georgina Kennedy)
•• Smith’s H.G. Wells on Film (Michael J. Anzelone)
•• Straub’s Conjunctions 39: The New Wave Fabulists (JG)
•• Warner’s Fantastic Metamorphoses, Other Worlds (Sandra Lindow)
•• Westfahl/Slusser/Leiby’s Explorations of Time in Science Fiction and Fantasy (Joe Haldeman)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• SF Intertextuality: Bunyan, Baum, and Burroughs (CM)
•• Request for SF Materials (Alexandre Ramos Mastrella)
•• Clarion Funding Cut at MSU (Michael Levy)
•• Mervyn Peake News (G. Peter Winnington)
•• Heinlein’s First Novel Surfaces (CM)
•• ICFA 2004 (Christine Mains)
•• Mythic Imagination Newsletter and Conference (John Adcox)
•• Call for Papers on Commonwealth SF (Andrew M. Butler)
•• Sunburst Award Shortlist (CM)
•• Tomb of Gilgamesh Discovered? (Hal Hall)

#92 = Volume 31, Part 1 = March 2004
• ARTICLES
•• William L. Svitavsky. From Decadence to Racial Antagonism: M.P. Shiel at the Turn of the Century
•• Patrick A. McCarthy. The Genesis of Star Maker
•• Gary Westfahl. Twelve Eighty-Seven: John Taine’s Satisfactory Solution.
•• Steffen Hantke. Raumpatrouille: The Cold War, the “Citizen in Uniform,” and West German Television
•• Alan C. Elms. The Psychologist Who Empathized with Rats: James Tiptree, Jr. as Alice B. Sheldon, PhD
•• Livia Monnet. A-Life and the Uncanny in Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within
• REVIEW-ESSAYS
•• Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr. Who Framed Science Fiction? Stockwell’s The Poetics of Science Fiction
•• Everett Bleiler. A Book That Fails to Work Miracles: Stover’s Edition of Wells’s The Man Who Could Work Miracles
•• Javier A. Martínez. Technology and Theology (or Lack Thereof): Graham’s Representations of the Post/Human
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Brown/St. Clair’s Declarations of Independence: Empowered Girls in Young Adult Literature,1990-2001 (Joe Sutliff Sanders)
•• Burgess/Bartle’s Reference Guide to SF, Fantasy, and Horror (Stefan Ekman)
•• De Paolo’s Human Prehistory in Fiction (Edward James)
•• Featherstone’s Exploration of Alien Mythology in America (Mark Bould)
•• Gunn’s The Road to Science Fiction (Karen Hellekson)
•• Lederer’s Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature and Glut’s The Frankenstein Archive (JG)
•• O’Keefe’s The Liberating Worlds of Fantasy Fiction (Nancy St. Clair)
•• Palmer’s Philip K. Dick (Aaron Parrett)
•• Palumbo’s The Fractal Aesthetic of Epic Science Fiction (Nicholas Birns)
•• Pastourmatzi’s Biotechnological and Medical Themes in SF and Westfahl/Slusser’s Disease and Medicine in SF and Fantasy (Graham Sleight)
•• Pinsky’s Future Present: Ethics and/as Science Fiction (Regina Cross)
•• Wolfe’s Animal Rites: American Culture, the Discourse of Species, and Posthumanist Theory (Sherryl Vint)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• SF Intertextuality: Hebrew Runes among the Ruins in Miller’s A Canticle For Leibowitz (Russell Hillier)
•• Wells on Film (John S. Partington)
•• British Comics and “The Boom” (John Newsinger)
•• Verne at the Library of Congress (Brian Taves)
•• New Publisher for FEMSPEC (Batya Weinbaum)
•• Conference on Fantastic Genres

#93 = Volume 31, Part 2 = July 2004
• INTERVIEW
•• Imre Szeman and Maria Whiteman. An Interview with Kim Stanley Robinson
• ARTICLES
•• J. Joseph Miller. The Greatest Good for Humanity: Isaac Asimov’s Future History and Utilitarian Calculation Problems
•• Umberto Rossi. The Game of the Rat: A.E. Van Vogt’s 800-Word Rule and P.K. Dick’s The Game-Players of Titan
•• Christopher Palmer. Mona Lisa Overdrive and the Prosthetic
•• Samuel Gerald Collins. Scientifically Valid and Artistically True: Chad Oliver, Anthropology, and Anthropological SF
• REVIEW-ESSAYS
•• Russell Blackford. Reading the Ruined Cities: Heuser’s Cyberpunk at the Intersection of the Postmodern and Science Fiction
•• Carl Freedman. Connections of Late Capitalism: Shaviro’s Connected, or What It Means to Live in the Network Society
•• Corey K. Creekmur. Superheroes and Science Fiction: Recent Works on Comics and Alan Moore
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Attebery’s Decoding Gender in Science Fiction (Sherryl Vint)
•• Butler/Mendlesohn’s The True Knowledge of Ken MacLeod (John Langan)
•• Fenton’s Edgar Rice Burroughs and Tarzan: A Biography and a new edition of Burroughs’s The Eternal Savage (Nicholas Birns)
•• New editions of Burroughs’s Under the Moons of Mars and Arnold’s Gullivar of Mars (Allen C. Kupfer)
•• Bukatman’s Matters of Gravity (Brooks Landon)
•• Gomel’s Bloodscripts: Writing the Violent Subject (JG)
•• Markley/Higgs/Kendrick/Burgess’s Red Planet (Randy Hayman)
•• Moores’s Alisdair Gray (Gavin J. Grant)
•• New critical editions of Stevenson’s Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (ed. Linehan), Stoker’s Dracula/Le Fanu’s Carmilla/Polidori’s The Vampyre (ed. Williams), and Shelley’s Frankenstein/Wells’s The Island of Doctor Moreau (ed. Wilt) (Andrew M. Butler)
•• Teslenko’s Feminist Utopian Novels of the 1970s (Angela Warfield)
•• Widdicombe/Preiser’s Revisiting the Legacy of Edward Bellamy (Scott Ash)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• Advertising and Calculators in William Gibson’s Pattern Recognition (Donald E. Morse)
•• Thoughts of a Shiel (and Bleiler) Fan (Ben P. Indick)
•• ICFA-25 (VH)
•• Calls for Papers and Corrigenda
•• Notes on Contributors

#94 = Volume 31, Part 3 = November 2004
• SPECIAL ISSUE: SOVIET SCIENCE FICTION: THE THAW AND AFTER
• Edited by Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr. and Erik Simon
•• Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr. Science Fiction and the Thaw
•• Tatiana Chernyshova. Science Fiction and Myth Creation in our Age
•• Elana Gomel. Gods Like Men: Soviet Science Fiction and the Utopian Self
•• Erik Simon. The Strugatskys in Political Context
•• Roman Arbitman. Back in the 1960s: Notes By a Man Who Wasn’t There
•• Daniel Kluger. Fables of Desire
•• Boris Natanovich Strugatsky. Working for Tarkovsky
• REVIEW-ESSAYS
•• Tom Moylan. Reading Utopia, Reading Utopian Readers: Roemer’s Utopian Audiences: How Readers Locate Nowhere
•• Aaron Dziubinskyj. Science Fiction in Latin America and Spain: Bell/Molina-Gavilán’s Cosmos Latinos
•• Neil Easterbrook. A New Addition to the Critical Toolbox: James/Mendlesohn’s The Cambridge Companion to Science Fiction
•• Veronica Hollinger. Technoculture All the Way Down: Gray’s Cyborg Citizen and Tofts/Jonson/Cavallero’s Prefiguring Cyberculture
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Burroughs’s Lost on Venus (Michael Levy)
•• Delany’s Aye, and Gomorrah (Russell Blackford)
•• Flammarion’s Lumen (Farah Mendlesohn)
•• Freedman’s The Incomplete Projects: Marxism, Modernity, and the Politics of Culture (RL)
•• Huftier’s La Belgique: De Rosny aîné à Jacques Brel and Bozzetto/Huftier’s Les Frontières du fantastique (ABE)
•• Kharitonov/Shcherbak-Zhukov’s Na ekrane-Chudo: Otechestvennaya kinofantastiaka i kinoskazka (Erik Simon)
•• McKee’s The Science-fictional Religion of Philip K. Dick (Umberto Rossi)
•• Moffitt’s Alien Images in Modern Mass Culture (Lincoln Geraghty)
•• Rzeszotnik’s Ein zerebraler Schriftsteller und Philosoph namens Lem (Franz Rottensteiner)
•• Scholder/Cooper’s The Selected Writings of Kathy Acker (Pawel Frelik)
•• Schwarz’s Die Erfindung des Kosmos (Franz Rottensteiner)
•• Thomas’s Dark Matter (Isiah Lavender III)
•• Tucker’s A Sense of Wonder (Carl Freedman)
•• Verne’s Journey Through the Impossible (ABE)
•• Weinstone’s Avatar Bodies (Sherryl Vint)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• Fanzine Research: Some Sercon Musings (RL)
•• The Boom is Dead. Long Live the Boom. (Mark Bould)
•• Planet Conjunctions (Donald M. Hassler)
•• Calls for Papers and Recent Conferences

#95 = Volume 32, Part 1 = March 2005
• A JULES VERNE CENTENARY
•• Arthur B. Evans. Editorial Introduction
•• Timothy Unwin. Jules Verne: Negotiating Change in the Nineteenth Century.
•• Terry Harpold. Verne’s Cartographies.
•• William Butcher. Hidden Treasures: The Manuscripts of Twenty Thousand Leagues.
•• George Slusser. Why They Kill Jules Verne: Science Fiction and Cartesian Culture.
•• Arthur B. Evans. Jules Verne’s English Translations.
•• Arthur B. Evans. A Bibliography of Jules Verne’s English Translations.
•• Teri J. Hernández. Translating Verne: An Extraordinary Journey.
•• Jean-Michel Margot. Jules Verne, Playwright.
•• Gregory Benford. Verne to Varley: Hard SF Evolves. (signed)
•• Jules Verne Roundtable (with James Gunn, I.F. Clarke, Paul Alkon, Carl Freedman, Roger Bozzetto, Jean-Michel Margot, Franz Rottensteiner, Nicholas Ruddick, and Mark Bould)
• REVIEW-ESSAYS:
•• Gregory Feeley. When World-views Collide: Bison Reprints of Philip Wylie’s Gladiator and The Disappearance
•• David Hartwell. Clute Speaking: John Clute’s Scores
•• Graham J. Murphy. Kick the Darkness Till It Bleeds Daylight: Raffaella Baccolini and Tom Moylan’s Dark Horizons
•• Graham Sleight. Visions of Delaware: Jutta Weldes’s Exploring Links Between Science Fiction and World Politics
• BOOKS IN REVIEW:
•• Bartter’s The Utopian Fantastic (Elain Ostry)
•• Dixon’s Spectacles of Destruction in American Cinema (Paul Williams)
•• Ginway’s Brazilian Science Fiction (Jim Rambo)
•• Morton’s Sourcebook on Shelley’s Frankenstein (Sharon Emmerichs)
•• Bison Reprint of E.E. “Doc” Smith’s Skylark Three (Joe Sanders )
•• Turner/Andre-Driussi’s The Fiction of John Crowley (Stefan Ekman)
•• Wright’s Gene Wolfe, Artifice and the Reader (JG)
•• Wesleyan Reprint of S. Fowler Wright’s Deluge (Paul Kincaid)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE:
•• Verne Centenary Events in Amiens and Nantes, France
•• New Jules Verne Adventures by Mike Ashley and Eric Brown
•• Verne Film Festival
•• Following in the Footsteps of Phileas Fogg
•• SF at the MLA 2004
•• SFRA and Eaton Conferences for 2005
•• Calls for Papers
•• Notes on Contributors

#104 = Volume 35, Part 1 = March 2008
• ARTICLES
•• Everett F. Bleiler. Johann Valentin Andreae, Fantasist and Utopist
•• Andrew Milner and Robert Savage. Pulped Dreams: Utopia and American Pulp Science Fiction
•• J.P. Telotte. Animating Space: Disney, Science, and Empowerment
•• Jorge Martins Rosa. A Misreading Gone Too Far? Baudrillard Meets Philip K. Dick
•• Sean Brayton. The Post-White Imaginary in Alex Proyas’s I, Robot
•• Susan Vanderborg. Gendering “Otherspace”: The “Martian Ty/opography” of Johanna Drucker and Brad Freeman
• REVIEW-ESSAY
•• David M. Higgins. SF and American Wests: Turner’s Cultural Tropes of the American West and Abbott’s Science Fiction and the American West
•• Graham Murphy. Infectious Negotiations of the Orient and Occident: Tatsumi’s Full Metal Apache
•• Aaron Parrett. Veins of Symbolism and Strata of Meaning: Kolker’s Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey
•• Nicholas Ruddick. An Unsuitable Memorial: Stover’s Edition of H.G. Wells’s Things to Come
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Fritzsche’s SF Literature from East Germany (Franz Rottensteiner)
•• Melzer’s Science Fiction and Feminist Thought (Jane Donawerth)
•• Miller’s Alasdair Gray: The Fiction of Communion (Paul Kincaid)
•• Morse’s Anatomy of Science Fiction (Lisa Yaszek)
•• Newitz’s Capitalist Monsters in American Pop Culture (D. Harlan Wilson)
•• Oramus’s Grave New World: The Decline of the West in the Fiction of J.G. Ballard (Umberto Rossi)
•• Levines’ edition of Poe’s Eureka (Takayuki Tatsumi)
•• Prezzavento’s I mondi urbani e post-urbani di J.G. Ballard (Valentina Polcini)
•• Sharp’s Racial Frontiers and Nuclear Apocalypse (Mark Bould)
•• Stableford’s Historical Dictionary of Fantasy Literature and The A to Z of Science Fiction Literature (Edward James)
•• Kapell/Lawrence’s Finding the Force of the Star Wars Franchise and Silvio/Vinci’s Culture, Identities and Technology in Star Wars (Adam Roberts)

• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• The SF Novels of Steve Katz and William T. Vollmann (Michael Hemmingson)
•• On Warren Miller: Correction (Mark Bould)
•• Errata (Umberto Rossi)
•• Nobel Prize Awarded to Doris Lessing (CM)
•• World Fantasy Award to Gary K. Wolfe (Eds.)
•• Off-Broadway H.G. Wells (CM)
•• Utopian Drawings in The New Yorker (CM)
•• Change of Venue for SFRA 2008 (CM)
•• Strung Out on SF: Blog IO9 (CM)
•• Robot News from Around the World (CM, RL)
•• Notes on Contributors

#105 = Volume 35, Part 2 = July 2008
• ARTICLES
• ON ANIMALS AND SCIENCE FICTION
• Edited by Sherryl Vint
•• Sherryl Vint. “The Animals in That Country”: Science Fiction and Animal Studies
•• Joan Gordon. Gazing Across the Abyss: The Amborg Gaze in Sheri S. Tepper’s Six Moon Dance
•• Cat Yampell. When Science Blurs the Boundaries: The Commodification of the Animal in Young Adult Science Fiction
•• Aline Ferreira. Primate Tales: Interspecies Pregnancy and Chimerical Beings
•• Rebecca Bishop. “Several Exceptional Forms of Primates”: Simian Cinema
•• Gavin Miller. Animals, Empathy, and Care in Naomi Mitchison’s Memoirs of a Spacewoman
•• Graham J. Murphy. Considering Her Ways: In(ter)secting Matriarchal Utopias
•• Carol McGuirk. Science Fiction’s Renegade Becomings
• REVIEW-ESSAYS
•• John Huntington. “A snappy short story having some scientific fact as its theme”: Ashley’s Science-Fiction Magazines from 1970-1980 and Westfahl’s Hugo Gernsback and the Century of SF
•• Sherryl Vint. Entangled Posthumanism: Barad’s Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter and Meaning
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• DeAngelis/Rossi ’s Transmigrazioni, I mondi di Philip K. Dick (Roger Bozzetto)
•• DeGraw’s The Subject of Race in American SF (Isiah Lavender III)
•• Malzberg’s Science Fiction in the Last Millennium (Michael Hemmingson)
•• Monk’s Alien as Archetype in the SF Short Story (Patrick A. McCarthy)
•• Moylan and Baccolini’s Utopia Method Vision and Milner/Ryan/Savage’s Imagining the Future: Utopia and Dystopia (Patrick Parrinder)
•• Muzzioli’s Scritture della catastrofe (Umberto Rossi)
•• Ortiz’s Emsh/willer: Infinity X Two (Joe Sanders)
•• Roberts’s The History of Science Fiction (JG)
•• Szumskyj’s Fritz Leiber: Critical Essays (RL)
•• Urbanski’s Plagues, Apocalypses and Bug-Eyed Monsters: How Speculative Fiction Shows Us Our Nightmares (Darja Malcolm-Clarke)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• On Ursula K. Le Guin’s Lavinia (Richard D. Erlich)
•• Wyndham’s Chocky: The First Covert Alternate World? (David Ketterer)
•• Pariah Elite (RL)
•• Revisiting K.M. O’Donnell (Michael Hemmingson)
•• Corrigienda (Susan Vanderborg, Eds.)
•• 2008 Pioneer Award (Adam Frisch, Eds.)
•• Heinlein Forum Reinstituted (RAH Centennial Committee)
•• Still Has a Mouth and Still Must Scream (CM)
•• Research Scholarship in Utopian Studies (Lorna Davidson)
•• New Journals, Special Issues, Associations, and CFPs
•• Notes on Contributors 363

#106 = Volume 35, Part 3 = November 2008
• ARTICLES
•• Thomas F. Bertonneau. Sacrifice and Sainthood: Walter M. Miller, Jr.’s Short Fiction
•• Alec Charles. War without End?: Utopia, the Family, and the Post-9/11 World in Russell T. Davies’s Doctor Who
•• Ria Cheyne. Created Languages in Science Fiction
•• Robert Crossley. Mars and the Paranormal
•• Simon Spiegel. Things Made Strange: On the Concept of “Estrangement” in Science Fiction Theory
•• Janis Svilpis. The Science-Fiction Prehistory of the Turing Test
• REVIEW-ESSAYS
•• Andrew M. Butler. Legit Dick: Philip K. Dick's Four Novels of the 1960s, Vest's Dick in the Movies, Blade Runner Collector's Edition, Brooker's Blade Runner Experience, and Robb's Dick on Film.
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Duchamp's The Wiscon Chronicles (Michael Levy)
•• Flanagan/Booth's re/Skin (Nicola Nixon)
•• Gannon's Rumors of War and Infernal Machines (Doug Davis)
•• Kerslake's Science Fiction and Empires (Pawel Frelik)
•• Potter/Marshall's Critical Studies in Battlestar Galactica (Bola C. King)
•• Robert's Anne McCaffrey: A Life with Dragons (Lisa Yaszek)
•• Russ's The Country You Have Never Seen (Jeanne Cortiel)
•• Sander's The Philosophy of Science Fiction Film (Neil Easterbrook)
•• Somigli's Valerio Evangelisti (Valentina Polcini)
•• Williams's H.G. Wells: Modernity, and Machines (D. Harlan Wilson)
•• Willis's Mesmerists, Monsters, and Machines (Anthony Enns)
•• Compère's Albert Robida: du passè au futur (ABE)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• Thomas Disch, R.I.P. Donal F. Theall (1928-2008) (John Fekete)
•• Harlan Ellison's Blood's a Rover (Michael Hemmingson)
•• SF Studies at UC Riverside (RL) SFRA Awards to Sherryl Vint and Andy Sawyer
•• Low-Fi Sci-Fi in Pomo LA (RL)
•• Dr. Brian Aldiss (Andy Sawyer)
•• New Discussion and SF Criticism Site (Jonathan McCalmount)
•• Correction: Lavinia Note (Richard D. Erlich)
•• Calls for Papers for 2009
•• Volume Index
•• Notes on Contributors

#107 = Volume 36, Part 1 = March 2009
• ARTICLES
•• Stacy Takacs. Monsters, Monsters Everywhere: Spooky TV and the Politics of Fear in Post-9/11 America
•• Julia List. “Call Me A Protestant”: Liberal Christianity, Individualism, and the Messiah in Stranger in a Strange Land, Dune, and Lord of Light
•• Dianne Newell and Victoria Lamont. Daughter of Earth: Judith Merril and the Intersections of Gender, Science Fiction, and Frontier Mythology
•• Christopher Sims. The Dangers of Individualism and the Human Relationship to Technology in Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
•• Anne Maxwell. Eugenics and the Classical Ideal of Beauty in Philip K. Dick’s “The Golden Man”
•• Umberto Rossi. A Little Something About Dead Astronauts
•• Peter Fitting. A Short History of Utopian Studies
• REVIEW-ESSAYS
•• David M. Higgins. Colonialism and Ideological Fantasy: Rieder’s Colonialism and the Emergence of Science Fiction
•• Michael Levy. The Skeletons and Exoskeletons of Genre: Mendlesohn’s Rhetorics of Fantasy
•• Amy J. Ransom. Recent Scholarship on Ursula K. Le Guin: Oziewicz’s One Earth, One People; Rochelle’s Communities of the Heart; Burns’s Le Guin and The Dispossessed; Bernardo/Murphy’s Le Guin: A Critical Companion
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Brake/Hook’s Different Engines (Justin St. Clair)
•• Colavito’s Knowing Fear (Rebecca Janicker)
•• Hassler/Wilcox’s New Boundaries in Political Science Fiction (David Seed)
•• Little’s Feminist Philosophy and Science Fiction (Joan Gordon)
•• Mead/Frelik’s Games and Gaming in Science Fiction (Craig Jacobsen)
•• Prucher’s Brave New Words (Aaron Parrett)
•• Strowa’s Paranoia, McCarthyism, and Colonialism in the Novels of Philip K. Dick (Umberto Rossi)
•• Wright’s Wolfe on Writing/Writers on Wolfe (Paul Kincaid)
•• Yaszek’s Galactic Suburbia (Rob Latham)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• A Ghost in the Rigging: Vonnegut and Koestler (Corinne Andersen)
•• Ancient Mailer (Michael Hemmingson)
•• A Correction and Two Additions (David Ketterer)
•• Lem’s Stalin Opera (Carol McGuirk)
•• Decoding Alien Messages (Rob Latham)
•• NEH Institute on Tolkien (Robin Reid)
•• Debut Issue: Ray Bradbury Review (William F. Touponce)
•• Special Issues and Calls for Papers
•• SFS in JSTOR

#108 = Volume 36, Part 2 = July 2009
• ON PROTO/EARLY SCIENCE FICTION
•• Roundtable Discussion
•• Josh Bernatchez. Monstrosity, Suffering, Subjectivity, and Sympathetic Community in Frankenstein and “The Structure of Torture”
•• Arthur B. Evans. The Verne School in France: Paul d’Ivoi’s Voyages Excentriques
•• Allison de Fren. The Anatomical Gaze in Tomorrow’s Eve
•• Monique Morgan. Madness, Unreliable Narration, and Genre in The Purple Cloud
• DOCUMENT IN THE HISTORY OF SCIENCE FICTION
•• Everett F. Bleiler. John Leonard Riddell, Pioneer
•• Orrin Lindsay’s Plan of Aerial Navigation, with a Narrative of his Explorations in the Higher Regions of the Atmosphere, and his Wonderful Voyage Round the Moon!
• REVIEW-ESSAYS
•• Arthur B. Evans. The Jules vs. Michel Verne Controversy: A New English Translation of The Golden Volcano
•• David Ketterer. The “Martianized” H.G. Wells?: Partington’s H.G. Wells in Nature, 1893-1946 and A New Edition of Star Begotten
•• George Slusser. Did Fellini Dream of Venusian Sheep?: A Reprint of The Great Romance by “The Inhabitant”
•• Rob Latham. Our Jaded Tomorrows: Dregnis’s Follies of Science, Guffey’s Retro, Heckman’s A Small World, Montandon’s Jetpack Dreams, Vandermeer’s Steampunk, and Wilson’s Where’s My Jetpack?
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Balzac’s The Centenarian (Nicholas Riddick)
•• Bodin’s The Novel of the Future (Paul K. Alkon)
•• Bulwer-Lytton’s The Coming Race (Donald M. Hassler)
•• Connors’s Criticism on Clark Ashton Smith (Greg Beatty)
•• Partington’s H.G. Wells’s Fin-de-Siècle (Paul Kincaid)
•• Carr’s H. Beam Piper (Joe Sanders)
•• Battaglia’s E.T. Culture (Diane Nelson)
•• Conley/Cain’s Encyclopedia of Fictional and Fantastic Languages (Samuel Gerald Collins)
•• Ferraro/Brugo’s Comunque umani (Umberto Rossi)
•• Kincaid’s What It Is We Do When We Read Science Fiction (Pawel Frelik)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• Public Domain and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (Michael Hemmingson)
•• Things That Were to Come (Rob Latham)
•• “Fondo Suvin” (Darko Suvin)
•• SFRA Awards (Lisa Yaszek)
•• Mullen Research Fellowships (Rob Latham)
•• 2009 SFS Symposium/Eaton Conference (Rob Latham
•• Special Issues, Conferences, and Calls for Papers/Proposals
•• Notes on Contributors

#109 = Volume 36, Part 3 = November 2009
• SCIENCE FICTION AND SEXUALITY
•• Symposium on Sexuality in SF
•• Allison de Fren. Technofetishism and the Uncanny Desires of A.S.F.R (alt.sex.fetish.robots)
•• Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr. SF/Porn: The Case for The Gas
•• Wendy Gay Pearson. Born to Be Bron: Destiny and Destinerrance in Samuel R. Delany’s Trouble on Triton
•• Jes Battis. Delany’s Queer Markets: Nevèr on and the Texture of Capital
•• James Campbell. Kill the Bugger: Ender’s Game and the Question of Heteronormativity
• REVIEW-ESSAYS
•• Sherryl Vint. Views from Queer: Pearson/Hollinger/Gordon’s Queer Universes: Sexualities in Science Fiction
•• Roger Luckhurst. The Productive Convergence of SF Criticism and Critical Theory: Csicsery-Ronay, Jr.’s The Seven Beauties of Science Fiction
•• Samuel Gerald Collins. Fiddling with Le Guin: Freedman’s Conversations with Ursula K. Le Guin and Kelso’s Ursula K. Le Guin
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Ballard’s Miracles of Life (Rob Latham)
•• Collins/Jervis’s Uncanny Modernity (Veronica Hollinger)
•• Duchamp/Gunn’s WisCon Chronicles, Vol. 2 (Jane Donawerth)
•• Holden/King’s Conceptual Breakthrough: Star/Alien (Carl Freedman)
•• Nama’s Black Space: magining Race in Science Fiction Film (De Witt Douglas Kilgore)
•• Stableford’s Science Fact and Science Fiction (Joan Gordon)
•• Muir’s A Critical History of Doctor Who on Television and Schuster/Powers’s The Discerning Fan’s Guide to Doctor Who (David Higgins)
•• Roshwald’s Science and Technology in Myth and Fiction (Jeff Hicks)
•• Sapegno/Salvini’s Sulla fantascienza femminista (Valentina Polcini)
•• Spiegel’s Die Konstitution des Wunderbaren (Franz Rottensteiner)
•• Westfahl’s Science Fiction Quotations (Neil Easterbrook)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• Bisexuality in New Wave SF (Rob Latham)
•• Vintage Sleaze and SF (Michael Hemmingson)
•• Sultry Sluts from Outer Space (Earl Kemp)
•• Sex and Star Trek (Michael Hemmingson)
•• Strange Leafy Sex (Michael Hemmingson)
•• Correspondence: On the Copernican Revolution (Paul Fayter)
•• Correspondence: Response (Adam Roberts)
•• Tribute to Robert A. Collins (Rob Latham)
•• SFRA 2009 (Arthur B. Evans)
•• UCR SF Position (Rob Latham
•• Calls for Papers
•• Notes on Contributors

#110 = Volume 37, Part 1 = March 2010
• THE 2009 SFS SYMPOSIUM: HISTORIES OF SCIENCE FICTION
•• Rob Latham. Introduction
•• Roger Luckhurst. Science Fiction and Cultural History
•• De Witt Douglas Kilgore. Difference Engine: Aliens, Robots, and Other Racial Matters in the History of Science Fiction
•• Veronica Hollinger. A History of the Future: Notes for an Archive
• OTHER ARTICLES
•• Laurel Bollinger. Symbiogenesis, Selfhood, and Science Fiction
•• Lisa Swanstrom. Capsules and Nodes and Ruptures and Flows: Circulating Subjectivity in Neal Stephenson’s Snow Crash
•• Robert P. Fletcher. The Hacker and the Hawker: Networked Identity in the Science Fiction and Blogging of Cory Doctorow
• REVIEW-ESSAY
•• Umberto Rossi. A Curate’s Egg: Baxter’s J.G. Ballard’s Surrealist Imagination: Spectacular Authorship
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Adair’s The American Epic Novel in the Late 20th Century (Paul Kincaid)
•• Barr’s Afro-Future Females (Ritch Calvin)
•• Bould/Butler/Roberts/Vint’s The Routledge Companion to SF (David Seed)
•• Brock’s Essays on Gothic and Victorian Sensation Fiction (Deborah Lutz)
•• Colavito’s Anthology of Horror Criticism (Amy J. Ransom)
•• Deuber-Mankowsky’s Lara Croft: Cyber Heroine (Sherryl Vint)
•• Geraghty’s Essays on Science Fiction and Fantasy Television (J.P. Telotte)
•• Grebowicz’s Reading Science Through Science Fiction (Jennifer Kavetsky)
•• Gunn/Barr/Candelaria’s Reading Science Fiction (Wanda Raiford)
•• Higgins’s Frankenstein: Character Studies (Elizabeth Corsun)
•• Kucukalic’s Philip K. Dick (Jason Bourget)
•• Luckhurst’s The Trauma Question (Tiffany Ana López)
•• Mendlesohn’s Critical Study of Children’s and Teens’ SF (Kelly Meyer)
•• Telotte’s The Essential Science Fiction Television Reader (Anthony Enns)
•• Westfahl/Slusser’s Science Fiction and the Two Cultures (Russell Blackford)
•• Walters’s Alternative Worlds in Hollywood Cinema (D. Harlan Wilson)
•• Weese’s Feminist Narrative and the Supernatural (Robin Anne Reid)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• E.T.A. Hoffmann and Philip K. Dick (Ian F. Roberts)
•• I.F. Clarke (1918-2009): Farewell to Captain Future (Paul Alkon)
•• Forthcoming SF Events at UC-Riverside (Rob Latham)
•• New Awards for SF&F Translation (Cheryl Morgan)
•• Announcing The Wesleyan Anthology of Science Fiction (SFS editors)
•• Notes on Contributors

#111 = Volume 37, Part 2 = July 2010
• SFS SHOWCASE: Library Collections and Archives of SF and Related Materials (presented by Rob Latham)
• ARTICLES
•• John Rieder. On Defining SF, or Not: Genre Theory, SF, and History
•• Morgan Fritz. Miniaturization and Cosmopolitan Future History in the Fiction of H.G. Wells
•• David Seed. The Course of Empire: A Survey of the Imperial Theme in Early Anglophone Science Fiction
•• William J. Fanning, Jr. The Historical Death Ray and Science Fiction in the 1920s and 1930s
•• Andrew Strombeck. The Network and the Archive: The Specter of Imperial Management in William Gibson’s Neuromancer
• REVIEW-ESSAYS
•• Mark Bould. From Panther to Princess, Sex Work to Starfleet: A Special Issue of African Identities on “The Black Imagination and Science Fiction”
•• Pawel Frelik. Close Encounters: Vest’s The Postmodern Humanism of Philip K. Dick
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Booker’s The Supernatural in American Culture (Kristin Noone)
•• Collins’s Anthropological Engagements with the Future (Diane M. Nelson)
•• Fisch’s Frankenstein (Amy J. Ransom)
•• Hall’s Naomi Mitchison: A Profile of Her Life and Work (John Clute)
•• Lunning’s Mechademia 3: Limits of the Human (D. Harlan Wilson)
•• Pordzik’s Futurescapes: Space in Utopian and Science Fiction Discourse (Peter Fitting)
•• Ransom’s Science Fiction from Québec: A Postcolonial Study (Sophie Beaule)
•• Rottensteiner’s The Black Mirror and Other Stories: An Anthology of Science Fiction from Germany and Austria (Sonja Fritzsche)
•• Steiff/Tamplin’s Battlestar Galactica and Philosophy and Eberl/Decker’s Star Trek and Philosophy (Russell Blackford)
•• Walters’s Alternative Worlds in Hollywood Cinema (D. Harlan Wilson)
•• Winnington’s The Working of Mervyn Peake’s Imagination (Paul Kincaid)•
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• Homage to J.G. Ballard (Roger Luckhurst)
•• The Short Career of Calvin M. Knox (Michael Hemmingson)
•• 2010-11 Mullen Fellows Announced (Rob Latham)
•• SFRA 2010 Awards (Lisa Yaszek)
•• Staging Dhalgren (Carol McGuirk)
•• Publishing Announcements and Calls for Papers
•• Notes on Contributors

#112 = Volume 37, Part 3 = November 2010
• ARTICLES
• SPECIAL SECTION ON OCTAVIA E. BUTLER
•• De Witt Douglas Kilgore and Ranu Samantrai. A Memorial to Octavia E. Butler
•• Benjamin J. Robertson. “Some Matching Strangeness”: Biology, Politics, and the Embrace of History in Octavia Butler’s Kindred
•• Adam J. Johns. Becoming Medusa: Octavia Butler’s Lilith’s Brood and Sociobiology
•• Maria Aline Ferreira. Symbiotic Bodies and Evolutionary Tropes in the Work of Octavia Butler
•• Marty M. Fink. AIDS Vampires: Reimagining Illness in Octavia Butler’s Fledgling
•• Reflections on Octavia E. Butler• • • • • • • • • • • ••
• THE 2010 SFS SYMPOSIUM: ANIMAL STUDIES AND SF
•• Rob Latham. Introduction
•• Sherryl Vint. Animal Studies in the Era of Biopower
•• Joan Gordon. Talking (for, with) Dogs: Science Fiction Breaks a Species Barrier
•• Carol McGuirk. The Animal Downdeep: Cordwainer Smith’s Late Tales of the Underpeople
• REVIEW-ESSAYS
•• Joanne Murray. An Imaginary Museum: Ballard at the Gagosian
•• Sandra J. Lindow. Le Guin’s Post-feminist Carrier Bag Make-Over: Clarke’s Ursula K. Le Guin’s Journey to Post-Feminism
• BOOKS IN REVIEW
•• Francis’s Conversations with Octavia Butler (Jane Donawerth)
•• Applebaum’s Representations of Technology in SF (Michael Levy)
•• Asma’s On Monsters (D. Harlan Wilson)
•• Bould/Miéville’s Red Planets: Marxism and Science Fiction (Pawe? Frelik)
•• Freedman’s Conversations with Samuel R. Delany and the new Wesleyan UP edition of Delany’s The Jewel-Hinged Jaw (Isiah Lavender III)
•• Link’s Understanding Philip K. Dick (John Rieder)
•• Patterson’s Robert A. Heinlein in Dialogue with His Century: The Authorized Biography: Vol. 1 (Carol McGuirk)
•• Ruddick’s The Fire in the Stone: Prehistoric Fiction from Charles Darwin to Jean M. Auel (Donald M. Hassler)
•• Stableford’s Gothic Grotesques, Jaunting on the Scoriac Tempests, and News of the Black Feast and other Random Reviews (Paul Kincaid)
•• Van Ness’ Watchmen as Literature (Joe Sanders)
•• Walter’s new Verne translations in Jules Verne’s Amazing Journeys: Five Visionary Classics (Arthur B. Evans)
•• Warren’s American Science Fiction Movies of the Fifties (J.P. Telotte)
•• Wilson’s Selfhood and the Body in Postcapitalist SF (Kelly Meyer)
•• McConnell’s Collected Essays on SF Storytelling and the Gnostic Imagination (Richard D. Erlich)
• NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE
•• Remembering Walter James Miller and E.F. Bleiler (Arthur B. Evans)
•• SFRA 2010 (Kristin Noone)
•• Correction (William J. Fanning)
•• Publishing Announcements and Calls for Papers

Condition: Binding - very good to like new, a couple of issues have a little bumping of corners or top or bottom of spine, come covers show some sun fading, except for the autograph, there is no writing in the issues, no highlighting or underlining of text.

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