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Osielski, Mary Y., Comp. – 1984
This bibliography is a guide to sources of information in the field of science fiction which are available in the University Libraries at the State University of New York (SUNY) at Albany. Other libraries may find it useful as a reference tool for expanding their science fiction collections. Emphasis is on works which deal primarily with science…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, College Libraries, Filmographies, Higher Education
Allen, L. David – 1975
A guide for teaching science fiction in secondary and college classrooms, this book contains an introductory essay that covers a variety of points about teaching science fiction, with a discussion of the audience, the correlation between science and fiction, and the changing role of science fiction. In a second essay, four categories of science…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Science Fiction
de Camp, L. Sprague; de Camp, Catherine C. – 1975
This book provides the general reader with an introduction to the field of imaginative fiction. The first two chapters describe the growth of science fiction from Aristophanes to Asimov and give the history of its parent literature, fantasy. The rest of the book affords the apprentice writer an overview of skills necessary for creating imaginative…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Fantasy, Guidelines, Higher Education

Barnes, Myra – College Composition and Communication, 1975
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), English Instruction, Higher Education, Language
Dumbleton, Duane D. – Trends in Social Education, 1977
Discusses ways of using science fiction to teach about culture, human variation, and cross-cultural understanding on elementary, secondary, and college levels. A selected bibliography is included. For journal availability, see SO 505 790. (Author/AV)
Descriptors: Cultural Education, Curriculum, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education

Clarke, Amy – Writing On the Edge, 2001
Interviews Kim Stanley Robinson, a well-known science fiction author. Discusses his reasons for writing science fiction, his writing influences, and writing techniques. Explains his interest in science and the relationship between music and his writing. (PM)
Descriptors: Ethics, Higher Education, Music, Novels
Spinks, C. W. – 1983
A brief history of science fiction and an analysis of its functions precedes a description of a university level course taught at Trinity University on science fiction, technology, and values. Science fiction writing is briefly traced from Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein" through the golden age of science fiction in the 1940s and 1950s to its…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Fantasy, Higher Education, Literary History

Zander, Arlen R. – American Journal of Physics, 1975
Describes the objectives, structure, and evaluation of an upper level, limited enrollment, elective course taught by a team of a physicist, a psychologist, and a literary scholar. Reports experience with the course since first taught in the Spring of 1972. (GH)
Descriptors: College Science, Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Interdisciplinary Approach
Steelman, Nell Vale – 1975
This paper discusses science fiction in general, and argues that science fiction is a method for exploring present and future potentialities, for educating people about the possibilities of the future, for helping people condition themselves to change. A science fiction course taught at the community college level as a humanities elective is…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, English Instruction, Futures (of Society), Higher Education

McNelly, Willis E. – CEA Critic, 1973
Discusses archetypal criticism as a means of understanding Science Fiction. (RB)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Mythology, Novels

McKinley, John M.; Doherty, Paul – American Journal of Physics, 1979
Examines the physical bases for the appearance of the starfield from a moving reference frame. Concludes with a sequence of computer-generated figures to show the appearance of Earth's starfield at various velocities and that a "starbow" does not exist. (Author/GA)
Descriptors: Astronomy, College Science, Fiction, Higher Education

Bird, Anne-Marie – Children's Literature in Education, 2001
Draws on Milton's "Paradise Lost" and on motifs found within Gnostic mythology and the poetry of William Blake to explore how Philip Pullman reworks the Judeo-Christian myth of the Fall in his trilogy, "His Dark Materials." Finds at its center "Dust": a conventional metaphor for human physicality in which good and evil, and spirit and matter…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, English Instruction, Fantasy, Higher Education
Verner, Zenobia, Ed. – English in Texas, 1977
This issue provides a selection of articles about literature and the teaching of literature. Titles include "Sin, Salvation, and Grace in 'The Scarlet Letter,'""'The Road Not Taken': A Study in Ambiguity,""In Search of Shakespeare: The Essential Years,""Right Deeds for Wrong Reasons: Teaching the Bible as…
Descriptors: Copyrights, Elective Courses, English Instruction, Higher Education
Landers, Clifford E. – Teaching Political Science, 1977
Science fiction can be used for introducing and analyzing political concepts at the undergraduate level for either a specialized theory-oriented course such as Political Science Fiction or an Introduction to Political Science course. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Instructional Materials, Interdisciplinary Approach, Introductory Courses

Telotte, J. P. – Journal of Film and Video, 1993
Looks at "The World of Tomorrow" (a 1984 documentary film of the 1939 New York World's Fair) as a gloss on the cultural tendency to sell the pleasures of technology while deferring questions about its nature. Notes that the film views the link between pleasure and technology that science fiction films variously exploit. (RS)
Descriptors: Film Criticism, Films, Higher Education, Popular Culture