Monday, 8 April 2019

Different Narratives

I am currently reading:

science fiction and fantasy by Poul Anderson and other, comparable, authors;

James Crossley's analysis of British political dialogue as recently as the 2017 General Election.

Whereas Crossley recapitulates our recent collective experience, Anderson transports us - to cite a single example - through inter-clan space and the hydrogen envelope of the monobloc into a new universe. From the prosaic to the fantastic, the mundane to the metaphysical?

I experienced this same dichotomy at the local cinema when a superhero film was preceded by trailers for Star Wars, Star Trek and a film about Margaret Thatcher with placards outside Parliament and the (recognizable) Labour Leader speaking in the House. Suddenly, our lives were on the screen.

This antithesis has a synthesis. The characters in the sf novels experience personal and political conflicts that are reflections of ours. 

1 comment:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

And I would far rather see trailers for films about Nicholas van Rijn and Dominic Flandry! What a pity no one has filmed versions of "Territory," or "A Message In Secret."

Some readers might find my "Textual Crawl For Flandry Movies" of some interest.

Sean