These thirteen original essays were written specifically for the Third J. Lloyd Eaton Conference on Science Fiction and Fantasy Literature, held February 21-22, 1981, at the University of California, Riverside. Leslie Fiedler sets the tone of this volume by fixing a basic set of coordinates--that of "elitist" and "popular" standards. Those replying to his charge Eric S. Rabkin, Professor of English at the Univer-sity of Michigan and author of "The Fantastic""in Literature, ""The Descent of Fantasy"; Gerald Prince, Professor of French at the University of Pennsylvania, "How New is New?"; Mark Rose, Professor of English at the University of California at Santa Barbara, author of "Alien Encounters, ""Jules Journey to the Cen-ter of Science Fiction"; Joseph Lenz, who teaches English Literature at the University of Michigan, "Manifest Science Fic-tion Epic and Classical Forms"; Michelle Masse, of the English Department at the George Mason University, "'All you have to do is know what you want' Individual Ex-pectations in "Triton"";""Gary K. Wolfe, who teaches English at Roosevelt University, au-thor of "The Known and the Unknown, ""Autoplastic and Alloplastic Adaptations in Science 'Waldo' and 'Desertion'"; Robert Hunt, an editor with Glencoe Press, "Sci-ence Fiction for the Age of Reading "Atlas Shrugged "in the 1980s"; George R. Guffey, Professor of English at UCLA, ""Fahr-enheit ""451"and the 'Cubby-Hole Editors' of Ballantine Books"; H. Bruce Franklin, Pro-fessor of English and American Literature at Rutgers University at Newark, "America as Science 1939"; Sandra M. Gilbert, Professor of English at the University of Cal-ifornia at Davis, and coauthor with Susan Gubar of "Madwoman in the Attic, ""Rider Hag-gard's Heart of Darkness"; the aforemen-tioned Susan Gubar, Professor of English at Indiana University, ""She "in "Her/ "Femi-nism as Fantasy"; and George R. Slusser, Cu-rator of the Eaton Collection, "Death and the Existential Fantasy."