Science fiction is more than just
Buck Rogers
By Gregory Renault
1. All facets of everyday life under modern capitalism feature
aspects of repression, dominance and reification in constant tension
with and opposition to other aspects, the struggle for autonomy
and creativity. This dialectic of domination and liberation is readily
seen in struggles of national liberation, class conflicts, the politics
of the family, and movements for sexual liberation, to cite the
more prominent contemporary arenas. Though usually treated as mere
ideology or even propoganda, the cultural sphere is another equally
important area of our experience filled with the conflict and tension
which result from dehumanized life in bureaucratic capitalism. Cultural
politics engaged in the service of human liberation begin with the
exploration of this dynamic, tracing out the salient forms and functions
of cultural contradictions, and relating them to society as a whole.
2. While mass culture theory from Tocqueville on has always
been informed by politics, never claiming to be value-free, both
radical and conservative forms alike have been marred by a tendency
to reduce mass culture to something other than the discrete form
of cultural expression that it is. In distinct contrast to bourgeois
high culture, divorced from explicit acknowledgment of its social
and historical sources by the general social division of labour,
mass culture is always seen in relation to the social, and hence
the political.
Conservative critics attempting to retain the purity of Western
civilization react strongly to the defilement of their intellectual
preserve. For them, mass culture is simply one facet of the general
shift to a mass society heralding the decline of excellence in favor
of democratic equality, the individuality for uniformity. Quality
of life is equated with the necessary scarcity and limited access
to the fruits of civilization endemic in aristocratic orders; culture
is preserved only by denying it to the majority, and class hierarchy
is defended in the name of Truth.
The social change opposed by culture critics like T.S. Eliot, Ortega
y Gasset and F.R. Leavis, and viewed ambivalently by liberals like
J.S. Mill is initially embraced by radicals. What conservatives
view as the extinction of enlightenment by the barbarism of mass
society, radicals characterize as the extension of previously limited
privileges in the revolutionary moment of the newly ascendant bourgeois
class. Extension of political rights and cultural participation
are progressive measures accompanying the new forms of class oppression.
An ambiguous development however, industrial capitalism's liberatory
ideology is used to prevent the actual realization of its own ideals.
But in its attempt to translate these bourgeois ideals of freedom,
equality and democracy into actual social relations, the socialist
tradition also denied the integrity and autonomy of the cultural
realm. Enshrined in the Marxist subsumption of political-ideological
superstructure under the technical base, cultural activity is seen
as a mere reflection of the more important economic relations, and
is relegated to sterile propaganda.
The conservative and radical views of mass culture simply cannot
came to terms with the vitality of popular thought. From the aristocratic
perspective, "democratic culture" is a contradiction in
terms, for by its very nature culture is only accessible to the
few; for the radical, ideology is false consciousness perpetrated
by the culture industry, and culture becomes merely a weapon to
be utilized in class warfare. As either non-serious entertainment,
or as propaganda, the net effect is the same: the denial of the
whole symbolic realm of meaning where the purpose and significance
of everyday life is continually constituted and (re)defined.
3. Instead, culture is a form of praxis. This remains true
even when folk-generated popular culture is replaced by the domination
of the market and the commodity form in mass culture. Undoubtedly
an aspect of the attempted integration of particularity (as a source
of negation) into a bureaucratically administered form of capitalism,
mass culture retains the ambiguity of ideology, which speaks the
truth even as it attempts to disguise it.
Mass culture is a historically specific form of social signification,
predicated on the technical, economic and cultural transformations
brought about by industrial capitalism. The colonization of the
cultural sphere begins in earnest with the transition from competitive
to monopoly capital: work relations are rationalized by "scientific
management"; concentration and centralization of capital gives
rise to the corporation, with application of the detailed devision
of labor to management producing specialized marketing agencies;
mass consumption is pushed via new media advertising images into
previously safe areas of life; family relations and character structures
crumble under the onslaught of the market and in response to the
increase of direct state intervention into the affairs of everyday
life.
Yet institutions of social reproduction are not merely agencies
of social control; they are also the site of social
(self-) constitution. The very technical and social changes brought
on by the rise of industrial capitalism permit the (albeit abstract)
extension of access to culture. Cheap, mass-produced newspapers
are one of the first manifestations of the transition from popular
to mass culture engendered by capitalism; out of the publication
of the early era grew the book trade, and the rise of the novel
as both entertainment and art form a tension between edification
and enlightenment retained within other, later forms of mass culture.
The market also permits the rise of professional writers and publishers,
even as it subjects culture to the unseen hand. The new literacy
required by capitalism at the same time universalizes thought.
The transition from competitive to monopoly capitalism marked by
the advent of rationalized mass production, mass consumption and
media mass culture retains this cultural dialectic. Appropriation
of popular culture's literary formulas into mass culture is paralleled
by the erosion of bourgeois high culture, even as subjectivity in
general retains an ambiguous ideological tension between affirmation
and negation of contemporary life. The Six-Million Dollar Man may
affirm literally the mechanical dehumanization we all figuratively
feel, and portray as natural and desirable the use of unrestrained
power by the state; at the same time it overtly recognizes the reduction
of life to an instrumentalized subservience whose only expression
is both quantitative and monetary. The reverse is the case for New
Wave music, from the start an ambiguous revolt which partook of
the very elements against which it struggled, but now co-opted by
jaded aesthetes who, in the rush to catch the latest market-managed
"counter cultural" fad, rob it of its authenticity by
ripping it from the social context within which it derives relevance
as a gesture of frustration and resistance.
4. Thus, even as the form of mass culture dialectically
combines formulas with originality, its content combines repression
with disclosure, identification with estrangement, and affirmation
with negation. The examination of one form of mass cultural literature,
science fiction, reveals its specific location in this cultural
dialectic.
Science fiction as an identifiable genre emerged as an essentially
ambivalent reaction to the process of developing industrial capitalist
society. Its two thematic poles reflect an unease with the new historical
changes which were to permeate other mass cultural forms as well:
on the one hand, it glorified scientific and technological progress
and embraced the new industry and its concomittant social forms;
on the other hand, the negative reaction to the alienation accompanying
industrial capitalism portrayed the change as regression rather
than progress, via romantic critiques based on a longing for earlier,
simpler times. Like all mass culture formulas, science fiction combines
general archetypes and literary forms (utopias, fabulous voyages,
gothic romance) with specific cultural materials rooted in the immediate
historical context; from this it derives its particular themes and
fictional strategies (alien encounter, questing scientist, distopian
satire, evolutionary fable, alternative universe).
Like most modern literature, science fiction is concerned with
the alienated human condition, yet it articulates this concern in
a distinct manner, as a form of literature concerned with the implications
of the problems engendered by industrial society. It particularly
utilizes a tradition of themes and devices which create common writer/reader
expectations in the context of a strong reception dialectic unique
to this form of mass culture (sf fandom). That is, production and
consumption are mutually influenced to an extent far greater than
in other forms of mass culture, which tend towards a sharply bifurcated
active/passive, top-down manipulation of the consumer. But in science
fiction, fandom the network of institutions (newsletters,
correspondence, conventions, formal awards procedures) which provide
means of reader-writer communication substantially affects
the nature of the production-consumption dynamic. While this tends
to enhance the insularity of the sf community, it also makes the
literature more responsive to the desires of readers by giving fans
(some of whom in turn become writers) an active input into the process
of cultural creation; the overall result is that science fiction
is fairly responsive to social change.
Science fiction also employs a literary approach which powerfully
enhances fictional distance to comment indirectly upon society.
Unlike the traditional novel, the science fiction setting is ontologically
different from our world (regarding space and/or time), yet there
remains aesthetic and thematic continuity for interest and intelligibility's
sake. The narrative must utilize literary conventions in order for
it to make sense to the reader (and in this respect sf is backward,
only recently having discovered "modernist" inventions);
likewise, regardless how exotic the setting or characters, the issues
it deals with must be relevant and interesting to someone living
here and now.
But while the imaginative worlds of realistic fiction are based
on actual contemporary or historical societies, those of science
fiction (and modern fantasy as well) are definitely not, being set
on other planets, in the future, in alternative universes, and the
like. Science fiction is thus particularly able to vicariously reintroduce
in its content those "alien" features the Other,
or the Different so often denied by the one-dimensional mechanisms
of exclusion prevalent in our society. The result is to make science
fiction essentially social: though fiction, its narrative style,
and thematic emphasis are realist in a manner which permits effective,
oblique social comment. The retention of some basic rules of the
scientific world view as well as the traditional conventions of
aesthetic coherence, forces the thematic focus back upon our world.
(In fantasy, science is replaced by magic: the specific focus upon
contemporary problems then gives way to romantic escapism.) Thus,
in the imaginary worlds of science fiction. "fiction"
twice removed comes full circle to comment on everyday life under
capitalism.
5. Abstractly considered, the form of science fiction reveals
a tension between structures of enlightenment and edification: the
content of science fiction reveals a dialectic between mimesis and
escape, between realism and miagination; while its ambiguous social
function features a parallel tension between ideological affirmation
and critical negation. Considered historically, the development
of science fiction's major phases reveals the dimensions of form,
content and social function in their concrete ambivalence.
The period of science fiction's emergence in the 19th century is
characterized by formal reliance upon mainstream literary techniques
and the novel form, while its themes emerge in romantic reactions
like Mary Shelly's Frankenstein, the early "scientific
romances" of H.G. Wells, as well as the technocratic adventures
of Jules Verne. Still a part of the literary establishment, and
not yet fully mass culture as we consider it, the emphasis tends
towards the critical pole, exploring themes of knowledge as power,
the dangers of science, as well as developing critiques of class
society (The Time Machine) and imperialism (The War of
the Worlds).
The second period occurs with the development of mass culture proper,
in the cheap, mass produced pulp specialty magazines of the 1920's
in the U.S. This period, also featuring the rise of mass advertising
and consumption as salient characteristics of newly transformed
American life, featured equally drastic changes in form, content
and social function of science fiction. It emerged for the first
time as a distinct literary entity in the "scientifiction"
of Hugo Gernsback's Amazing Stories, formally shifting from
novel to short story, thematically shifting to an emphasis on inventions
themselves, rather than their social effects a complete reversal
in both areas. Postwar boom and optimism in the new phase of capitalism
are reflected in the ideological themes of the period: imperialism,
seen in the perpetual conquest of foreign planets; racism, seen
in aliens thinly disguised as non-whites: sexism, seen in the male
protagonists, with women (when they appear at all) as decorative
objects or rewards. Ironically, the birth of science fiction as
an independent cultural entity is achieved at the cost of literary
excellence as well as critical content.
John Campbell's Astounding in the 1940's marked a qualitative
shift in form and content again, though not in social function.
Growing reader-writer sophistication, and an emerging self-conscious
attitude fostered by the fandom phenomenon led to an emphasis away
from gadgets as ends in themselves, and towards literary considerations
in story construction: a tendency (which continues today) of growing
reapproachment between science fiction and mainstream literature.
This third phase was further altered by a parallel shift from short
story back to novels again, following the explosion of mass market
paperbacks in the 1950's. However, though the craftsmanship improved,
the themes remained ideological. Overall, they reveal an ahistorical
ethnocentrism, with the institutions and values of capitalist America
projected throughout the universe as natural and eternal
bourgeois abstraction on a grandiose scale. Science fiction reflected
the faith in scientific progress, and the optimism prevalent in
the U.S. at its height as a global capitallist power, even as cold
war paranoia crept in via fear of aliens, blobs and the like.
Since the 1960's science fiction has become "legitimate",
entering the academy, as well as the work of mainstream writers
such as Burgess, Lessing and Pynchon. It has also become more sophisticated,
approaching literary quality from its own side (even while retaining
its character as mass culture). What was called the "new wave"
marked a culmination of previous developments, an experimentation
with literary style and language, but also featuring a critical
reversal of science fiction's previous ideological perspective.
The most recent return to the critical pole of the continuum is
this time a self-conscious one: writers such as LeGuin, Brunner
and Delaney incorporate reflections on science fiction into their
critiques of social, economic, political, sexual and psychological
alienation; more than ever, the unique structures of the science
fiction form are being utilized to critically extrapolate and explore
new social relations. The most recent shift in science fiction reveals
a case of one form of mass culture which has partially transcended
its initial thematic and political limitations.
6. Science fiction novels such as LeGuin's The Dispossessed,
Delaney's Triton or Russ' The Female Man actively
contribute to the ongoing self-criticism of the science fiction
community, as well as to the critical consciousness of our society.
Current science fiction as a form of mass culture may not be a socially
pervasive as television or rock music, but it certainly partakes
of the same socio-cultural dynamic. Concrete investigation of science
fiction's elements and their socio-historical development, reveals
the ongoing dialectic of domination and liberation which characterizes
life in modern capitalist society, demonstrating that mass culture
shares that drive to humanize our world which is usually characterized
in only political terms. Cultural politics is thus an essential
part of the struggle for full human liberation.
Published in The
Red Menace Volume 3, Number 1, Winter, 1979.
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