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| Acknowledgements | ||
| Introduction | ||
| Pt. I | Modern science fiction | |
| 1 | New World, New Texts | 3 |
| 2 | Generic Engineering | 21 |
| 3 | Genre Or Mode? | 38 |
| 4 | The Uses of Otherness | 49 |
| 5 | Reading the Episteme | 64 |
| 6 | Dreams of Reason and Unreason | 75 |
| 7 | The Stars My Dissertation | 89 |
| Pt. II | Postmodern science fiction | |
| 8 | Making Up Worlds | 103 |
| 9 | Allography and Allegory | 117 |
| 10 | SF as a Modular Calculus | 128 |
| 11 | The Multiplicity of Worlds, of Others | 137 |
| 12 | The Autumnal City | 153 |
| Notes | 159 | |
| Bibliography | 180 | |
| Index | 193 |
Overview
Damien Broderick explores the postmodern self-referentiality of the sci-fi narrative, its intricate coded language and discursive 'encyclopaedia'. He shows how, for perfect understanding, sci-fi readers must learn the codes of these imaginary worlds and vocabularies, all the time picking up references to ...