Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Prologue
- 1 The Ends of First Sf: Pioneers as Veterans
- 2 After the New Wave: After Science Fiction?
- 3 Beyond Apollo: Space Fictions after the Moon Landing
- 4 Big Dumb Objects: Science Fiction as Self-Parody
- 5 The Rise of Fantasy: Swords and Planets
- 6 Home of the Extraterrestrial Brothers: Race and African American Science Fiction
- 7 Alien Invaders: Vietnam and the Counterculture
- 8 This Septic Isle: Post-Imperial Melancholy
- 9 Foul Contagion Spread: Ecology and Environmentalism
- 10 Female Counter-Literature: Feminism
- 11 Strange Bedfellows: Gay Liberation
- 12 Saving the Family? Children's Fiction
- 13 Eating the Audience: Blockbusters
- 14 Chariots of the Gods: Pseudoscience and Parental Fears
- 15 Towers of Babel: The Architecture of Sf
- 16 Ruptures: Metafiction and Postmodernism
- Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
8 - This Septic Isle: Post-Imperial Melancholy
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Prologue
- 1 The Ends of First Sf: Pioneers as Veterans
- 2 After the New Wave: After Science Fiction?
- 3 Beyond Apollo: Space Fictions after the Moon Landing
- 4 Big Dumb Objects: Science Fiction as Self-Parody
- 5 The Rise of Fantasy: Swords and Planets
- 6 Home of the Extraterrestrial Brothers: Race and African American Science Fiction
- 7 Alien Invaders: Vietnam and the Counterculture
- 8 This Septic Isle: Post-Imperial Melancholy
- 9 Foul Contagion Spread: Ecology and Environmentalism
- 10 Female Counter-Literature: Feminism
- 11 Strange Bedfellows: Gay Liberation
- 12 Saving the Family? Children's Fiction
- 13 Eating the Audience: Blockbusters
- 14 Chariots of the Gods: Pseudoscience and Parental Fears
- 15 Towers of Babel: The Architecture of Sf
- 16 Ruptures: Metafiction and Postmodernism
- Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Gray Watson writes of Jubilee (Derek Jarman, 1978) that ‘[if] England, this sceptred isle, has fallen into chaos and disarray, and needs to be redeemed, this is the manifestation at a national, political and historical level of an archetypal pattern of fall and redemption which embraces each individual psyche as well as the whole cosmos’ (1996: 44). Just as William Blake's poetic vision of Albion had embraced personal, nationalistic and cosmic mythologies, and had tried to steal them back from the usurping church and state, so Jarman wished to reclaim patriotism from those who had sullied it. In the late 1960s it had seemed that Swinging London was the cultural capital of the world, with Carnaby Street, the Beatles and the Rolling Stones, and Judith Merril had titled an anthology England Swings SF (1968). But it was a struggle to publish New Worlds – which moved from a monthly schedule to a supposed quarterly to an occasional paperback – and the British film industry went into one of its periodic retreats.
Harold Wilson had been the Labour Prime Minister since 16 October 1964, but was unexpectedly defeated by the Conservative Edward Heath on 18 June 1970, as inflation began to grow and unemployment increased. The union of Great Britain and Northern Ireland was in danger of breaking up – there was a bombing campaign in Ireland and England by the IRA, and on 8 March 1973 a referendum over Northern Ireland joining the Republic of Ireland, which was defeated.
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- Information
- Solar FlaresScience Fiction in the 1970s, pp. 106 - 119Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2012