Citations:scientifiction

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English citations of scientifiction

Noun[edit]

1916 1926 1932 1949 1953 1999 2002
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1916 January, Hugo Gernsback, Electrical Experimenter, page 474:
    I am supposed to report Münchhaussen's[sic] doings; am supposed to be writing fiction, scientifiction, to be correct.
  • 1926, Hugo Gernsback, Amazing Stories, A New Sort of Magazine:
    There is the usual fiction magazine, the love story and the sex-appeal type of magazine, the adventure type, and so on, but a magazine of "Scientifiction" is a pioneer in its field in America. By "scientifiction" I mean the Jules Verne, H. G. Wells, and Edgar Allan Poe type of story—a charming romance intermingled with scientific fact and prophetic vision.
  • 1932, Progress & the Scientific Worker, issue 6:
    The present age is, by common consent, full of marvels, but there is none to sing of them. That United States product, Scientifiction, is perhaps the crude forerunner of a literature which shall be consonant with progress and material welfare.
  • 1946, C. S. Lewis, The Great Divorce, p. vii:
    Firstly, I must acknowledge my debt to a writer whose name I have forgotten and whom I read several years ago in a highly coloured American magazine of what they call "Scientifiction."
  • 1949, Chad Walsh, C. S. Lewis: Apostle to the Skeptics:
    In form, they resemble the interplanetary fiction of H. G. Wells and the "scientifiction" of American pulp magazines, but there is a clear difference. Lewis's novels are the scientifiction of a philosopher.
  • 1953, The American Mercury, volume 77, p. 26:
    There has become immensely popular, these days, a kind of tale that has earned a special name: scientifiction.
  • 1975, Jack Williamson, The Early Williamson, p. xvi:
    The realization of scientifiction is proverbial. Science has made hardly a single step that scientifiction has not foretold. And science, in return, has disclosed a million new and startling facts, to serve as wings for the scientifiction author's brain.
  • 1990, Robert Lambourne, Michael Shallis & Michael Shortland, Close Encounters?: Science and Science Fiction, →ISBN, p. 17:
    In 1923 Gernsback published a special 'Science Fiction Number' of Science and Innovation that included six science fiction stories (partly to get rid of a backlog that had built up), and in 1924 he sent out circulars inviting readers to subscribe to a new magazine he intended to call Scientifiction.
  • 1999, Dean Wesley Smith, Captain Proton: Defender of the Earth, "The Ruination of Scientifiction", →ISBN, p. 109:
    If scientifiction as a healthy and evolving genre dies, you'd better believe it takes Captain Proton with it.
  • 1999, Gwyneth A. Jones, Deconstructing the Starships, →ISBN, p. 192:
    The space flight wildly imagined by the scientifiction of the genre's early days was just within the bounds of prediction, and it has duly happened (though so far on a somewhat more modest scale than envisaged).
  • 2002, Patrick Lucanio & Gary Coville, Smokin' Rockets, →ISBN, p. 1:
    The Red Scare and science fiction, we soon learned, were only part of a greater story about the human spirit that began with the controversial origins of science fiction itself, with the scientifiction of Hugo Gernsback in the late 1920s.