Description
From the 1970’s and on there have been many studies of the field of science fiction, and many overviews telling us “what it’s all about”. However, none of these essays have examined SF and its sister genre fantasy from a traditional point of view. This is what Lennart Svensson’s new book, Science Fiction Seen From the Right, attempts to do. The study takes a profound look at 20th century SF and fantasy, focusing on works having some discernible relation to eternal values such as faith, responsibility, duty, honor, courage and self-restraint. The world of Tradition, of perennial truths and values, is often mirrored in SF and fantasy. This study discusses the central books and authors in question.
The first authors to be explored are Robert A. Heinlein, Frank Herbert, C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien, these four being something of archetypal fantasists with a conservative slant. But there’s more; the study then looks at European dystopian authors such as Karin Boye, George Orwell, and Aldous Huxley along with Thea von Harbou and Ernst Jünger. Additionally, there are chapters on viable British authors such as Michael Moorcock, Arthur C. Clarke and J. G. Ballard, all of them examined from a traditional point of view.
The study also takes a look at an older generation of traditionally minded fantasy authors, such as Robert E. Howard, H. P. Lovecraft, and Edgar Rice Burroughs. Latin America is covered by way of Jorge Luis Borges and Carlos Castaneda. To top it all off there are chapters on more contemporary right-leaning authors like Jerry Pournelle and Ayn Rand, along with delving into the works of Ray Bradbury, Philip K. Dick and A. E. van Vogt. Svensson then gives us topical essays on History, Anarchy, War and Nihilism. The essay also includes chapters on the development of the genre as such and a look at SF art, comics, and films.