Structurally, a future history has an earlier period and a later period and the earlier period has a pivotal character or characters who are builders of the future:
in HG Wells' The Shape Of Things To Come, Gustave de Windt, author of Social Nucleation (1942);
in Robert Heinlein's Future History, DD Harriman, "The Man Who Sold The Moon";
in Isaac Asimov's future history, Susan Calvin, robopsychologist;
in James Blish's Cities in Flight, Senator Bliss Wagoner, secretly behind the spindizzy and the antiagathics;
in Blish's The Seedling Stars, Jacob Rullman, inventor of pantropy, the science of human adaptation to extraterrestrial environments;
in Blish's Haertel Scholium, Adolph Haertel and also Thor Wald, inventor of the Dirac transmitter;
in Poul Anderson's Psychotechnic History, Valti and Fourre;
in Anderson's Technic History, Nicholas van Rijn, leader of the independents in the Polesotechnic League, and David Falkayn, discoverer of Mirkheim and Founder of Avalon;
in Jerry Pournelle's CoDominium future history, John Christian Falkenberg, mercenary.
Wells' Philip Raven dreams an "Outline of the Future" whereas Asimov's Hari "Raven" Seldon predicts the future. Raven's dreamed text includes a chapter on Karl Marx and Henry George.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeleteYour last paragraph beat me having to ask why you omitted Hari Seldon as a "pivotal character" from your first mentioning of Asimov's works.
I'm still rereading Blish's THEY SHALL HAVE STARS, but I do see your point about Senator Wagoner.
And I would have included Manuel Argos and Dominic Flandry as two of the pivotal characters we see in Anderson's Technic Civilization stories.
Sean
Sean,
DeleteI was trying to concentrate on "earlier periods," though.
Paul.