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Co-curator Andy Sawyer said that the genre worked best in what he called its "metaphoric role," when the sci-fi setting serves as a mirror to our own.
The number of issues science fiction can tackle are potentially endless: George Schuyler's "Black No More" uses the imagined discovery of a skin-whitening therapy to lampoon the racial attitudes of 1930s America; The pollution-drenched and weather-wrecked planet depicted in 1972's "The Sheep Look Up" served as a comment on U.S. attitudes toward ecological issues.
"The Sultana's Dream," a 1905 work by Bengali social reformer Roquia Sakhwat Hussain, imagined a world of flying cars and solar energy where men were locked away in a kind of reverse purdah -- a critique of her culture's restrictive sexual mores.
Easily the most fun is "Only Lovers Left Alive," a book which posits the mass suicide of all adults -- leaving the teens to go on a hormonal rampage. The work drips with 1960s generation-gap anxiety.
"It doesn't need to imitate our world or even look like our world," said Sawyer. "(But) science fiction works best when it's about our world."
"Out of this World" opens Friday. Admission is free.
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Online:
The British Library's science fiction exhibit:
http://www.bl.uk/sciencefiction/
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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