“the book is worthwhile as a detailed examination of a period in the development of SF that has been inadequately covered in the past”—<i>Critical Mass</i>; “valuable...Westfahl...has proved himself once again as one of the most competent scholars in the field”—<i>Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts</i>; “analyzes the career of science fiction editor and author Hugo Gernsback and how his work influenced the development of the science fiction genre”—<i>Reference & Research Book News.</i>
An examination of science fiction editor and author Hugo Gernsback's career, this critical study explores the many ways in which his work influenced the genre. It summarizes the science fiction theories of Gernsback and his successors, considers his efforts to define science fiction both verbally and visually, and for the first time offers detailed studies of his rarest periodicals, including Technocracy Review, Superworld Comics, and Science-Fiction Plus. An analysis of his ground-breaking novel, Ralph 124C 41+: A Romance of the Year 2660, and its influences on a variety of science fiction novels, films and television programs is also offered.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
PART I. HUGO GERNSBACK THE EDITOR
1. Cremators of Science Fiction: Brian Stableford and John Clute on Hugo Gernsback and His Legacy
2. The Popular Tradition of Science Fiction Criticism, 1926–1980
3. Wanted: A Symbol for Science Fiction
4. Peaks and Valleys: Hugo Gernsback’s Career as a Science Fiction Editor
PART II. HUGO GERNSBACK THE AUTHOR
5. Evolution of Modern Science Fiction: The Textual History of Hugo Gernsback’s Ralph 124C 41+
6. “Man against Man, Brain against Brain”: The Transformations of Melodrama in Science Fiction
7. Gadgetry, Government, Genetics, and God: The Forms of Science Fiction Utopia
8. “The Gernsback Continuum”: Cyberpunk in the Context of Science Fiction
9. Scientific Adventures: Hugo Gernsback’s Career as a Science Fiction Writer
Notes
Bibliography
Index