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The videogame series Mass Effect is a remarkable rarity not only
for being an original science-fictional franchise of recent vintage
that has risen to such prominent commercial and critical success in
popular culture but also for pushing the canonical boundaries of
how science fiction as a genre will be experienced and understood
in the future. This book analyzes the significance of the game for
an understanding of the evolving SF genre and articulates an
explanatory framework to limn its landmark reception in videogame
history. This book both synthesizes the burgeoning body of
scholarship on Mass Effect for a readership unfamiliar with either
the game or the critical conversation on its salient importance,
while simultaneously, for readers already invested in the
science-fiction and videogame scholarship, mounting an extended
inquiry as to why Mass Effect has served as such a representative
milestone in videogame and genre history. The book should appeal to
veteran science-fiction and videogame scholars and students as well
as a wide variety of fans, consumers, gamers, and general readers.
Citizen Science Fiction draws on an interdisciplinary swath of
literature and media to make the case that the science fiction
genre can help rethink the pedagogical use of citizen science as a
tool to interrogate our collective civic engagement with science
and the incorporation of science into a rigorous, exciting
writing-based curriculum. The book revolves around recent
developments in specific scientific disciplines, including biology,
ecology, computer science, astronomy, and cognitive science. Winter
closely studies a range of science-fiction texts and tropes -- such
as aliens, robots, clones, mind uploads, galactic empires -- for
what they have to contribute to the ongoing scholarly discussion on
psychological mindset and mindful argument, reading for probing
inquiry and productive uncertainty in the age of the Anthropocene,
reading for voice with a view to our digitally dominated future,
and reading for threshold concepts in a scientifically driven
society.
One of the few points critics and readers can agree upon when
discussing the fiction popularly known as New Space Opera - a
recent subgenre movement of science fiction - is its canny
engagement with contemporary cultural politics in the age of
globalisation. This book avers that the complex political
allegories of New Space Opera respond to the recent cultural
phenomenon known as neoliberalism, which entails the championing of
the deregulation and privatisation of social services and
programmes in the service of global free-market expansion.
Providing close readings of the evolving New Space Opera canon and
cultural histories and theoretical contexts of neoliberalism as a
regnant ideology of our times, this book conceptualises a means to
appreciate this thriving movement of popular literature.
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