The Evolution of Science Fiction discussion

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More Than Human
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April 2017 Group read - More than Human
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Apr 01, 2017 07:52AM

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I also read a collection of short stories of Sturgeon, including The Man Who Lost the Sea, which I liked much better.




I think three words are crucial to appreciating Sturgeon's work in this novel: nineteen fifty three.
Eisenhower was in his first term. PTSD was not a diagnosis at the time. Soldiers had returned from war to a world they were not prepared for, and which was not prepared to accept the ravages done to them. Women had been forced out of work to give the jobs back to men, and subjugate themselves into happy motherhood. America was forcefully, definitely segregated. Hordes of people were sublimating or repressing powerful emotions in order to "fit in." Popularized Freudian analysis was having a heyday.
And along comes Sturgeon, with a novel about five extreme misfits with (what was then) magical, mystical powers, along with severe disabilities, who can somehow harness their hopes and fears, become a unique merge, and in a wildly improbable setting, become near gods, while of course, making some terrible mistakes. That he managed to make this fairy tale of a story believable is a tribute to his mastery of the language.
Eisenhower was in his first term. PTSD was not a diagnosis at the time. Soldiers had returned from war to a world they were not prepared for, and which was not prepared to accept the ravages done to them. Women had been forced out of work to give the jobs back to men, and subjugate themselves into happy motherhood. America was forcefully, definitely segregated. Hordes of people were sublimating or repressing powerful emotions in order to "fit in." Popularized Freudian analysis was having a heyday.
And along comes Sturgeon, with a novel about five extreme misfits with (what was then) magical, mystical powers, along with severe disabilities, who can somehow harness their hopes and fears, become a unique merge, and in a wildly improbable setting, become near gods, while of course, making some terrible mistakes. That he managed to make this fairy tale of a story believable is a tribute to his mastery of the language.

Given that this group is about the "evolution of science fiction," we probably ought to think about where More than Human falls in the development of psychological sci fi. It obviously predates Flowers for Algernon and Gateway. What came before it?
I can think of a couple fantasy/horror titles- Darker Than You Think and Conjure Wife- that had a psychological edge, but nothing that tried to combine scifi with Freudianism or any other psych concept.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I forgot to mention some other things that were pretty radical at the time like the color barrier. There isn't one for homo gestalt, but there was for the rest of the US, as Charles mentioned.
Nudity is OK & he hints at some sexual & bodily freedom that was pretty far out for the time, too. Sturgeon belonged to the same nudist society as Heinlein. About 15 years later, he wrote "If All Men Were Brothers", a story that blew a lot of minds. My grandfather was absolutely horrified by it even being published when I mentioned it to him. He couldn't even discuss it rationally.
Phil wrote: "That's a good point, Charles. 1953.
Given that this group is about the "evolution of science fiction," we probably ought to think about where More than Human falls in the development of psychologi..."
You might want to include one of my all-time favorites, A.E.
Van Vogt's Slan, from 1946 as a precursor, for its telepathy, mind-reading and mob psychology. And a good friend of mine, who studied Golden Age Sci Fi tells me the little known, Olaf Stapledon’s Odd John from 1935. would be in that list. Mutant "supernormal" Odd John, leads a group of highly evolved misfits to form a colony where they experiment with telepathy, free love, and "intelligent worship."
And JIm, I really liked your review of More Than Human
Given that this group is about the "evolution of science fiction," we probably ought to think about where More than Human falls in the development of psychologi..."
You might want to include one of my all-time favorites, A.E.
Van Vogt's Slan, from 1946 as a precursor, for its telepathy, mind-reading and mob psychology. And a good friend of mine, who studied Golden Age Sci Fi tells me the little known, Olaf Stapledon’s Odd John from 1935. would be in that list. Mutant "supernormal" Odd John, leads a group of highly evolved misfits to form a colony where they experiment with telepathy, free love, and "intelligent worship."
And JIm, I really liked your review of More Than Human
Charles wrote: "You might want to include one of my all-time favorites, A.E. Van Vogt's "Slan", from 1946 as a precursor."
I hope to read that someday. It is definitely one of the early examples of the genre of "supermen" living in hiding among ordinary people. The idea is still alive today in Astonishing X-Men and They're Not Like Us, etc.
"Slan" was also an important step in the development of Sci-Fi conventions and fandom. Some of the readers felt to some extent different (or better) for liking SF books, but were treated as outsiders or weirdos by the "mundanes". Some rallied around the slogan Fans are Slans.
I hope to read that someday. It is definitely one of the early examples of the genre of "supermen" living in hiding among ordinary people. The idea is still alive today in Astonishing X-Men and They're Not Like Us, etc.
"Slan" was also an important step in the development of Sci-Fi conventions and fandom. Some of the readers felt to some extent different (or better) for liking SF books, but were treated as outsiders or weirdos by the "mundanes". Some rallied around the slogan Fans are Slans.

He tackles something similar in The Silkie & I liked it much better. Like The Voyage of the Space Beagle, it's 3 short stories married into a novel. There's still a fair amount of convenience, but it works better in the shorter settings.

A.E. van Vogt is reputedly one of the great progenitors of SF. I've read three of his books, Slan, The Voyage of the Space Beagle, and Null-A. Of these I like Slan the best, I think, but van Vogt is not among my favorite authors.
I read More than Human earlier. It's the only Sturgeon I've got under my belt. I hadn't thought of comparing it to Slan. And now both have faded too much for me to compare them.




Strangely told from inside minds that are not like ours, the story sometimes starts on tangents from out of nowhere, but we read on, confident that the story line will converge with what we already have followed. The book ends with a philosophy of morality and ethos, but after that there is a kind of epilogue that I felt was unsatisfying and also unnecessary - it added nothing, but Sturgeon apparently felt that it was needed to wrap things up. I think he should have simply left it unsaid. Other than that, the book is a good read.

Strangely told from inside minds that are not like ours, the story sometimes starts on tangents from out of nowhe..."
I pretty much agree, Buck. The ending was my least favorite part. It just didn't feel necessary.

http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/esp
I've got side tracked with this one but i'm hoping to resume reading it next week....

Thanks for that! I can verify the price appears as $1.99 in US. But I may still skip it as I'm eager to move on to Solaris.

Strangely told from inside minds that are not like ours, the story sometimes starts on tangents from..."
I have to admit, I thought the last chapter made an important statement that rounded up the story pretty well i.e. that a sense of morality and ethics is a necessary aspect of human psychology, without which, we risk becoming brutal and self-interested.
I also wonder if Sturgeon was thinking of Nietzsche's 'superman' when devising the human gestalt in More Than Human . Again, a sense of morality would impose a necessary control to prevent such a being from destroying itself and everything around it (in this respect, Sturgeon might have been considering the effect Nietzschean philosophy had on Hitler and the Nazi army). The suggestion is that ethics counters nihilism.
Books mentioned in this topic
Slan (other topics)The Silkie (other topics)
The Voyage of the Space Beagle (other topics)
Slan (other topics)
Astonishing X-Men, Vol. 1: Gifted (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Fritz Leiber (other topics)Theodore Sturgeon (other topics)