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Psionic Boom: John W. Campbell, Astounding Science Fiction and ‘psi-powers’ in post-war science fiction

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Psionic Boom: John W. Campbell, Astounding Science Fiction and ‘psi-powers’ in post-war science fiction. / Baker, Brian.
Altered Consciousness in the Twentieth Century. ed. / Jake Poller. London: Routledge, 2019. (Routledge Studies in Twentieth Century Literature).

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Baker, B 2019, Psionic Boom: John W. Campbell, Astounding Science Fiction and ‘psi-powers’ in post-war science fiction. in J Poller (ed.), Altered Consciousness in the Twentieth Century. Routledge Studies in Twentieth Century Literature, Routledge, London. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429061196-3

APA

Baker, B. (2019). Psionic Boom: John W. Campbell, Astounding Science Fiction and ‘psi-powers’ in post-war science fiction. In J. Poller (Ed.), Altered Consciousness in the Twentieth Century (Routledge Studies in Twentieth Century Literature). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429061196-3

Vancouver

Baker B. Psionic Boom: John W. Campbell, Astounding Science Fiction and ‘psi-powers’ in post-war science fiction. In Poller J, editor, Altered Consciousness in the Twentieth Century. London: Routledge. 2019. (Routledge Studies in Twentieth Century Literature). doi: 10.4324/9780429061196-3

Author

Baker, Brian. / Psionic Boom : John W. Campbell, Astounding Science Fiction and ‘psi-powers’ in post-war science fiction. Altered Consciousness in the Twentieth Century. editor / Jake Poller. London : Routledge, 2019. (Routledge Studies in Twentieth Century Literature).

Bibtex

@inbook{4db707e597914e0991bfe4a41c2dace2,
title = "Psionic Boom: John W. Campbell, Astounding Science Fiction and {\textquoteleft}psi-powers{\textquoteright} in post-war science fiction",
abstract = "t is to John W. Campbell, writing as {\textquoteleft}Don A. Stuart{\textquoteright} in the late 1930s and early 1940s, and more particularly as editor of Astounding Science Fiction/ Analog from 1937 to 1971, that the rise in interest in psychokinesis and other {\textquoteleft}psi-powers{\textquoteright} in science fiction is often attributed. Drawing especially on Charles Fort{\textquoteright}s Wild Talents (1932), Campbell encouraged contributors to Astounding to investigate in fiction the potential for human development of {\textquoteleft}extra sensory powers{\textquoteright} or altered states of awareness. James Blish{\textquoteright}s Jack of Eagles (1949) is an early entry into this sub-genre. This chapter will investigate two main streams of this mode of fiction in relation to post-war American, and particularly Cold War culture: {\textquoteleft}psi-powers{\textquoteright} as an index of human evolution, the coming of a {\textquoteleft}next stage{\textquoteright} in human development; and psi-powers developed as and through technology. Campbell{\textquoteright}s own story {\textquoteleft}Forgetfulness{\textquoteright} (writing as Stuart in Astounding, 1937) inaugurates the first mode, and this chapter will consider examples such as AE van Vogt{\textquoteright}s Slan (1951, first serialised in Astounding), Theodore Sturgeon{\textquoteright}s More Than Human (1953) and Alfred Bester{\textquoteright}s The Stars My Destination (1957). The other is sometimes thought of under the name {\textquoteleft}psionics{\textquoteright}, indicating a technologically-enhanced psi-power, or as I will consider it here, powers of psychokinesis or telepathy as a kind of prosthesis. This is demonstrated in van Vogt{\textquoteright}s World of Null-A (1953, first serialised in Astounding), where the protagonist Gosseyn is able to transport into various different bodies, and in other novels such as Frank Herbert{\textquoteright}s The God Makers (1960). Rather than presenting these two modes as opposites or even complementary modes of fiction, this chapter will suggest that the rise of the science fiction of ESP/{\textquoteright}psi{\textquoteright} signifies a cybernetic and enhanceable conception of the subject. The work of Rhine and Fort, when filtered through Campbell{\textquoteright}s Astounding and the {\textquoteleft}psi-boom{\textquoteright} he promoted, is enlisted into the technological progressivism that underpins the {\textquoteleft}Golden Age{\textquoteright} of science fiction, diagnostic of a particular moment in post-war American culture. ",
keywords = "science fiction, ESP, telepathy",
author = "Brian Baker",
year = "2019",
month = dec,
day = "18",
doi = "10.4324/9780429061196-3",
language = "English",
isbn = "9780367731625",
series = "Routledge Studies in Twentieth Century Literature",
publisher = "Routledge",
editor = "Jake Poller",
booktitle = "Altered Consciousness in the Twentieth Century",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Psionic Boom

T2 - John W. Campbell, Astounding Science Fiction and ‘psi-powers’ in post-war science fiction

AU - Baker, Brian

PY - 2019/12/18

Y1 - 2019/12/18

N2 - t is to John W. Campbell, writing as ‘Don A. Stuart’ in the late 1930s and early 1940s, and more particularly as editor of Astounding Science Fiction/ Analog from 1937 to 1971, that the rise in interest in psychokinesis and other ‘psi-powers’ in science fiction is often attributed. Drawing especially on Charles Fort’s Wild Talents (1932), Campbell encouraged contributors to Astounding to investigate in fiction the potential for human development of ‘extra sensory powers’ or altered states of awareness. James Blish’s Jack of Eagles (1949) is an early entry into this sub-genre. This chapter will investigate two main streams of this mode of fiction in relation to post-war American, and particularly Cold War culture: ‘psi-powers’ as an index of human evolution, the coming of a ‘next stage’ in human development; and psi-powers developed as and through technology. Campbell’s own story ‘Forgetfulness’ (writing as Stuart in Astounding, 1937) inaugurates the first mode, and this chapter will consider examples such as AE van Vogt’s Slan (1951, first serialised in Astounding), Theodore Sturgeon’s More Than Human (1953) and Alfred Bester’s The Stars My Destination (1957). The other is sometimes thought of under the name ‘psionics’, indicating a technologically-enhanced psi-power, or as I will consider it here, powers of psychokinesis or telepathy as a kind of prosthesis. This is demonstrated in van Vogt’s World of Null-A (1953, first serialised in Astounding), where the protagonist Gosseyn is able to transport into various different bodies, and in other novels such as Frank Herbert’s The God Makers (1960). Rather than presenting these two modes as opposites or even complementary modes of fiction, this chapter will suggest that the rise of the science fiction of ESP/’psi’ signifies a cybernetic and enhanceable conception of the subject. The work of Rhine and Fort, when filtered through Campbell’s Astounding and the ‘psi-boom’ he promoted, is enlisted into the technological progressivism that underpins the ‘Golden Age’ of science fiction, diagnostic of a particular moment in post-war American culture.

AB - t is to John W. Campbell, writing as ‘Don A. Stuart’ in the late 1930s and early 1940s, and more particularly as editor of Astounding Science Fiction/ Analog from 1937 to 1971, that the rise in interest in psychokinesis and other ‘psi-powers’ in science fiction is often attributed. Drawing especially on Charles Fort’s Wild Talents (1932), Campbell encouraged contributors to Astounding to investigate in fiction the potential for human development of ‘extra sensory powers’ or altered states of awareness. James Blish’s Jack of Eagles (1949) is an early entry into this sub-genre. This chapter will investigate two main streams of this mode of fiction in relation to post-war American, and particularly Cold War culture: ‘psi-powers’ as an index of human evolution, the coming of a ‘next stage’ in human development; and psi-powers developed as and through technology. Campbell’s own story ‘Forgetfulness’ (writing as Stuart in Astounding, 1937) inaugurates the first mode, and this chapter will consider examples such as AE van Vogt’s Slan (1951, first serialised in Astounding), Theodore Sturgeon’s More Than Human (1953) and Alfred Bester’s The Stars My Destination (1957). The other is sometimes thought of under the name ‘psionics’, indicating a technologically-enhanced psi-power, or as I will consider it here, powers of psychokinesis or telepathy as a kind of prosthesis. This is demonstrated in van Vogt’s World of Null-A (1953, first serialised in Astounding), where the protagonist Gosseyn is able to transport into various different bodies, and in other novels such as Frank Herbert’s The God Makers (1960). Rather than presenting these two modes as opposites or even complementary modes of fiction, this chapter will suggest that the rise of the science fiction of ESP/’psi’ signifies a cybernetic and enhanceable conception of the subject. The work of Rhine and Fort, when filtered through Campbell’s Astounding and the ‘psi-boom’ he promoted, is enlisted into the technological progressivism that underpins the ‘Golden Age’ of science fiction, diagnostic of a particular moment in post-war American culture.

KW - science fiction

KW - ESP

KW - telepathy

U2 - 10.4324/9780429061196-3

DO - 10.4324/9780429061196-3

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9780367731625

T3 - Routledge Studies in Twentieth Century Literature

BT - Altered Consciousness in the Twentieth Century

A2 - Poller, Jake

PB - Routledge

CY - London

ER -