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Week Twelve: Afro-Futurism and Diverse Position Science Fiction

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     For this week I read “Tan-Tan and the Rolling Calf”. First off, big fan of ankylosaurids. Secondly what I noticed most in this story is the power of words and oral presentation. The piece is also written in a dialect, like a mix between how Patois is written and english, it’s written how people talk. I don’t think this is by mistake. Dialects associated with African or Caribbean people are often looked down upon and not even recognized as a real dialect or language. That the heroine ends her persecution by telling her story through oral prose empathizes the importance of words, so the dialect being chosen is a very direct choice.      There are also themes of childhood being taken away. Tan-Tan herself lost her home at a young age, and as she grew older lost her father through the abuse he did to her. She hangs out with a Douen, Abitefa. In mythology a douen is a wandering spirit of a child who hadn’t been christened or baptized before death. I do not kn

Week Eleven: Cyberpunk and Steampunk

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“Case fell into the prison of his own flesh.”      I think it is a common feeling among those with chronic pain and physical disabilities, to feel contempt for one’s own body. At least I do. The bigger sting than the physical pain is that it prevents you from doing what you love. It is not surprising that depression is co-morbid. We see this in the main character of Neuromancer as he struggles with not being able to jump into the matrix due to damage to his nervous system. He is described as “living for the bodiless exultation of cyberspace” and when this is taken away we see him turn to drugs, trying to chase a similar high to cyberspace, to not feel his body. Without cyberspace, we see that he is reckless and mostly uncaring about himself as he is passively trying to die through his bad decisions      There is something inherently desirable to be free from one’s own body People have always used inventions and technology to do more than what a physical for

Week Ten: Narrative from the Multi-Verse

Week Nine: The Final Frontier

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        When I was in high school I made it my goal to read something from Jules Verne and HG Wells because I watched a dvd commentary on Atlantis: The Lost Empire and the creators aimed the movie to feel like one from a Verne/Wells novel. So I read “Journey to the Center of the Earth” and “The Time Machine”. I quickly realized why they used the books for inspiration as both authors are very good at doing unexplored worlds within our normal world. Both books are speculative but feel grounded with plausibility.      “The Time Machine” became my favorite because of it’s speculation of where humanity as species will go if we continue with our classism issue. The divide has gotten so great that different lifestyles have created different human species, the helpless Eloi and the predatory Morlocks. “The Time Machine” suggests that the lower class will be driven underground and will become nocturnal hunters of the upper class who have become small and weak becaus