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de Carvalho Ferrasa, Ingrid Aline; Machado, Elaine Ferreira; Miquelin, Awdry Feisser; Mocellin, Ronei Clécio; Leal, Bruna Elise Sauer; Kuchla, Micheli; Oliveira, Luciane Kawa Reis; Coelho, Adriane Marie Salm – Science & Education, 2023
In this article, we present reflections on the possible dialogs between literary creation and science teaching. Our considerations will be directed to the work of Mary Shelley, Frankenstein, and the role of science and science education over the text that gave rise to the genre "science fiction." This work aims at presenting the…
Descriptors: Fiction, Science Instruction, Science Education, Authors
Manià, Kirby; Mabin, Linda Kathleen; Liebenberg, Jessica – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2018
This paper reflects on the teaching of science fiction texts to first-year engineering students at the University of the Witwatersrand as part of a Critical Thinking course that uses literature as a vehicle through which to develop competence in critical literacy and communication. This course aims to equip engineering students, as future…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Engineering Education, Teaching Methods, College Freshmen
Andrews, Gillian – E-Learning and Digital Media, 2015
Possibilities for a different form of education have provided rich sources of inspiration for science fiction writers. Isaac Asimov, Orson Scott Card, Neal Stephenson, Octavia Butler, and Vernor Vinge, among others, have all projected their own visions of what education could be. These visions sometimes engage with technologies that are currently…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Educational Technology, Science Fiction, Science and Society
van der Laan, J. M. – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2010
Often called the first of its kind, "Frankenstein" paved the way for science fiction writing. Its depiction of a then impossible scientific feat has in our time become possible and is essentially recognizable in what we now refer to as bioengineering, biomedicine, or biotechnology. The fiction of "Frankenstein" has as it were given way to…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Books, Biomedicine, Biotechnology
Shoffstall, Grant – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2010
This essay takes as its chief point of departure Jacques Ellul's contention that imaginative treatments of malevolent technology in antitechnological science fiction, by way of inviting rejection, refusal, dismissal, or condemnation, conspire in facilitating human acceptance of and adjustment to technology as it otherwise presently is. The author…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Science and Society, Technological Advancement, Human Body
Raulerson, Joshua Thomas – ProQuest LLC, 2010
A spectre is haunting contemporary technoculture: the spectre of Singularity. Ten years into a century thus far characterized chiefly by the catastrophic failure of global economic and political systems, deepening ecological anxieties, and slow-motion social crisis, the only sector of our collective cultural myth of Progress still vibrantly intact…
Descriptors: Technological Advancement, Futures (of Society), Science Fiction, Humanism
Laughter, Judson C.; Adams, Amelia D. – Urban Education, 2012
To respond to calls for more research on culturally relevant science teaching, we present findings from one middle school science teacher's practices in an effort to contribute to this research. We describe how a discussion lab centered on Derrick Bell's (1992) short story "The Space Traders" was purposively included in a lesson on scientific bias…
Descriptors: Middle School Teachers, Science Teachers, Teacher Educators, Grade 6
Stivers, Richard – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2010
Aldous Huxley is perhaps the only author to have written a work of science fiction and a work of nonfiction to ascertain whether fiction had become reality. Both "Brave New World" and "Brave New World Revisited" are discussed and compared with Jacques Ellul's work on technology.
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Educational Sociology, Science and Society, Didacticism
Sullivan, Heather I. – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2010
While nature is often claimed to be a space of harmonized balance or an antidote to the chaos of the modern world, we need a more grounded assessment of nature as endlessly changing and much less predictable than we like to assume. In this essay, I explore Karen Traviss' provocative exploration of unbalanced nature and unbounded bodies in her…
Descriptors: Ecology, Physical Environment, Genetics, Influence of Technology
Blackmore, Tim – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2010
Creating memory during and after wartime trauma is vexed by state attempts to control public and private discourse. Science fiction author Iain Banks' novel "Look to Windward" proposes different ways of preserving memory and culture, from posthuman memory devices, to artwork, to architecture, to personal, local ways of remembering.…
Descriptors: Memory, War, Foreign Countries, Influence of Technology
Ribbat, Christoph – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2010
In a satiric chapter of David Foster Wallace's novel "Infinite Jest," a mock media expert reports how American consumers of the near future recoil from a new communication device known as "videophony" and return to the voice-only telephone of the Bell Era. This article explores the said chapter in the framework of media theories reading the…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Telecommunications, Video Technology, Influence of Technology
Bowman, Diana M.; Hodge, Graeme A.; Binks, Peter – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2007
Popular culture can play a significant role in shaping the acceptance of evolving technologies, with nanotechnology likely to be a case in point. The most popular fiction work to date in this arena has been Michael Crichton's techno-thriller "Prey," which fuses together nanotechnology science with science fiction. Within the context of "Prey,"…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Molecular Structure, Science and Society, Science Fiction
Sheffield, Caroline C.; Carano, Kenneth T.; Berson, Michael J. – Social Education, 2008
This article describes the Frank Reade dime novels, published in 1882, that are now recognized as the beginnings of the modern science fiction novel in the United States. They illustrate the hope that Americans of the time held for the future that newly invented technology could offer. Although the Frank Reade stories highlighted the promise of…
Descriptors: Literary Genres, Science Fiction, Novels, Social Studies
Wetmore, Alex – Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society, 2007
William Gibson's 1984 cyberpunk novel "Neuromancer" continues to be a touchstone in cultural representations of the impact of new information and communication technologies on the self. As critics have noted, the posthumanist, capital-driven, urban landscape of "Neuromancer" resembles a Foucaultian vision of a panoptically engineered social space…
Descriptors: Novels, World Views, Literary Criticism, Content Analysis
van der Laan, J. M. – Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society, 2006
Over the years, many movies have presented on-screen a struggle between machines and human beings. Typically, the machines have come to rule and threaten the existence of humanity. They must be conquered to ensure the survival of and to secure the freedom of the human race. Although these movies appear to expose the dangers of an autonomous and…
Descriptors: Technological Advancement, Electromechanical Technology, Films, Science and Society
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