Synopses & Reviews
Although better known today for such classic and influential science fiction novels as
Last and First Men,
Odd John,
Star Maker and SiriuS≪/i>, Olaf Stapledon also wrote eight other science fiction books, seven volumes of philosophy and social criticism, and hundreds of reviews, lectures, and articles. Common to all his works is a moral vision that is characterized by ecstatic joy and revolutionary zeal, though tempered by detachment and skepticism. This is the first book collection of original essays devoted entirely to Stapledon. Where previous critical interpretation has concentrated on individual works by the author, these essays deal with larger issues in Stapledon's writings and with his relationship to such forces as Marxism and literary modernism.
The articles develop new avenues for the exploration of Stapledon's work, focusing on philosophical, linguistic, political, and structural elements, and showing how Stapledon's non-fictional writing may illuminate aspects of the fiction. In addition, the book includes Stapledon's hitherto unpublished manuscript Letters to the Future as well as a primary and secondary bibliography. An important contribution to the study of science fiction and fantasy, The Legacy of Olaf Stapledon will be of interest to scholars and students of Stapledon and of the genre.
Review
. . . Highly recommended not for the casual reader; but for any with a prior familiarity with Stapledon's works, who wants a scholarly collection of critical essays.The Midwest Book Review
Synopsis
Although better known today for such classic and influential science fiction novels as Last and First Men, Odd John, Star Maker and Sirius, Olaf Stapledon also wrote eight other science fiction books, seven volumes of philosophy and social criticism, and hundreds of reviews, lectures, and articles. Common to all his works is a moral vision that is characterized by ecstatic joy and revolutionary zeal, though tempered by detachment and skepticism. This is the first book collection of original essays devoted entirely to Stapledon. Where previous critical interpretation has concentrated on individual works by the author, these essays deal with larger issues in Stapledon's writings and with his relationship to such forces as Marxism and literary modernism. The articles develop new avenues for the exploration of Stapledon's work, focusing on philosophical, linguistic, political, and structural elements, and showing how Stapledon's non-fictional writing may illuminate aspects of the fiction. In addition, the book includes Stapledon's hitherto unpublished manuscript "Letters to the Future" as well as a primary and secondary bibliography. An important contribution to the study of science fiction and fantasy, The Legacy of Olaf Stapledon will be of interest to scholars and students of Stapledon and of the genre.
Table of Contents
Introduction by Patrick A. McCarthy
The Moral Philosophy of Olaf Stapledon by Robert Shelton
Convention and Spirit in Olaf Stapledon's Fiction by Cheryl Herr
Stapledon and Literary Modernism by Patrick A. McCarthy
"Seeing It Whole": Olaf Stapledon and the Issue of Totality by Charles Elkins
Ritual Experience in Odd John and Sirius by Louis Tremaine
Diabolical Intelligence and (Approximately) Divine Innocence by Curtis C. Smith
Olaf Stapledon's "Letters to the Future," edited by Robert Crossley
Bibliography
Index