Science Fiction
English 191
[SEMESTER] [MEETING DATE/TIME]
[LOCATION]
Instructor: Max Larson
mjl415@psu.edu
[OFFICE HOURS]]

Course Description

One could argue that the designation “science fiction” is an oxymoron. How should we reconcile a branch of knowledge dedicated to the systematic production of facts—science—with a branch of literature that is imagined, poetic, non-factual—fiction? Participants in this course will examine how science-fictional texts represent, challenge, manage, and actively deploy the longstanding histories of science and fiction as two conflicting modes for producing critical knowledge about the world. This course is not intended to be a survey or comprehensive history of the genre; instead, we will focus primarily—with a handful of notable exceptions—on American authors writing after 1945, placing particular emphasis on a domain where expertise in science and expertise in fiction converge in a singular fashion: human language.

Discussing fictional and non-fictional works by Samuel R. Delany, Ursula K. Le Guin, Ted Chiang, Ken Liu, Benjamin Lee Whorf, Ngugi wa Thiong’o, Joanna Russ, Vilem Flusser, Joseph Weizenbaum, Philip K. Dick, and others, we will explore how science and fiction come together to make strange, sympathetic, antagonistic, and/or symbiotic bedfellows in the creation and critical apprehension of human culture.

Required Films:

Required Texts:

Assignments + Grading

Final grades will be calculated from a composite of five items throughout the semester:

If you have questions or concerns regarding these assignments, I will gladly discuss them with you.

Materials

Please bring the following items to each class:

Nondiscrimination + Accommodations

I expect myself and everyone else to maintain a safe classroom environment. Discrimination or harassment of any form—and particularly on the basis of race, color, disability status, nationality, sexual and gender identity, or religion—will not be tolerated.

If you require any acommodations in order to participate in this course, please let me and/or Penn State's Student Disability Resources office know as soon as possible. It is your right to have these accommodations met.

Schedule

Except for the "required texts" listed above, all readings are available on Canvas, including PDF copies of articles from the web. Readings should be completed prior to, not after, the date listed. Due dates for assignments are marked in red.

Week One

Tuesday
Thursday

Week Two

Tuesday
Thursday

Week Three

Tuesday
Thursday

Week Four

Tuesday
Thursday

Week Five

Tuesday
Thursday

Week Six

Tuesday
Thursday

Week Seven

Tuesday
Thursday

Week Eight

Tuesday
Thursday
Friday

Week Nine

Tuesday
Thursday

Week Ten

Tuesday
Thursday

Week Eleven

Tuesday
Thursday

Week Twelve

Tuesday
Thursday

Week Thirteen

Tuesday
Thursday

Week Fourteen

Tuesday
Thursday

Week Fifteen

Tuesday
Thursday

Week Sixteen

Tuesday
Thursday

Finals Week

[DATE]






header image: Electric Dreams (1984)