SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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What is the difference between Science Fiction and Fantasy

I guess Brenda is right, it's the cover!



I would say it depends on how he achieves these things. If you make a stab at being scientifically plausible, then you'd be sci-fi. But if your guy does these things just because he "can", then you've written Fantasy with Science Fiction props... which is Star Wars, aka Space Fantasy.

That's what I said earlier.
A rose is distinct from an orchid but they're both beautiful. A volcano is not a supernova, but they're both beautifully terrifying in the majestic power.

"What's cool about noir (and this really true about any genre book/movie/entertainment medium I have not mentioned (marionette shows?)) is that simple changes, i.e. switching genders, moving a crime from downtown L.A. to a suburban high school, can make the genre seem fresh while at the same time maintaining the genre's most essential characteristic — predictability. Reading within a genre — any genre, really — means that you expect a certain kind and number of things to happen."
Which is what I was talking about earlier -- you can put almost any genre into any setting (the Western and Samurai stories being the sole exceptions because of being tied to specific locations) and it remains the same at its core.

If you do it right, you can even manage to move Samurai stories and Westerns:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Magn...

I haven't read Titus Groan, but it raises an interesting side topic: what other books have you all read that are difficult to categorize. I'll start: Against the Day by Thomas Pynchon and Dahlgren by Samuel Delany. The first is simultaneously SciFi, historical novel, thriller, erotica, and who knows what other genres. The second is mostly social commentary, with equal parts SciFi, horror, mystery, and psychadelia (and many other genres mixed in as well).


LAST LETTERS FROM HAV by Jan Morris. She's best known as a travel writer for the New Yorker and the like, but this book concerns her, "Jan Morris", and her visit to Hav, a sorta-in-the-Balkans, sorta Levantine, sorta Beirut as crossroads-of-the-world, city that's completely fictitious. It's written in an identical style to her nonfiction and she cracks only the slightest Mona Lisa smile at the more outrageous bits of invention. A less alert or geographically-savvy reader could be completely taken in. I really enjoyed it, but I'm damned if I could rationally or firmly categorize it by genre. FWIW, the publisher's notes on the back mark it as 'fiction' but I was led to it by a review in ASIMOV'S SF magazine.

If you do it right, you can even manage to move Samurai stories and Westerns:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Magn... "
Have you seen those two movies back to back? The Magnificent Seven doesn't work as a translation because it loses the samurai subtext, replacing the bushido code with self-interest. When it comes to theme, it's like the difference between The Remains of the Day and Fight Club.
The core differences between samurai and cowboys are as stark as the core differences between Science Fiction and Fantasy. This is exactly what I mean when I say people get too hung up on the props and aren't looking to the heart of the tale. You can't simply cross out "samurai" and write in "cowboy" or "circus bugs" (A Bug's Life) and have it be the same story, because you lose an essential quality inherent to the underlying structure.
Some stories, like Star Wars, you can literally plunk down in any other genre and the characters would remain exactly the same: their motivations, their behavior, etc. You take the samurai out of The Seven Samurai and it's no longer the same story. The plot is the same, but you can say that for almost any story. "Man leaves town, stranger comes to town."

One that I can't decide if it's Fantasy or Science Fiction is James MacDonald's
The Apocalypse Door. There is ample evidence to make the case for either genre.



I love that book. One of my high school speeches was based on it, and some kids thought dragons were real after that.
Around that time, though, there were a whole slew of similar books. The most famous was, of course, Wil Huygen and Rien Poortvliet's Gnomes.

There was also Brian Froud's Faeries.


Well I'm sure we could come up with a scientific way of making animals 'talk' haha
But yes that's a good point. Does it come to the individual to distinguish what is sci-fi or fantasy then or is it something that can be decided in general? Or is it only some works that depend on the individual?

Actually, there are plenty of counterexamples to this oversimplification readily at hand.
For instance: most people would say the Dresden Files is fantasy; urban fantasy, yes, but definitely fantasy. Yet it has a fairly well-defined, limited, coherent magical system -- things don't just happen without there being, for instance, a transfer of energy or what have you. White Court vampires have superstrength because they feed on emotions, etc.
On the other hand, if you spend any time at all looking at the Star Wars EU, you'll see that plenty of people try to explain the effects and mechanisms of the technology. Obviously, they don't do it in a way that tells you how to do it -- it may even be impossible -- but it is, at least, fairly consistent and grounded in science or pseudoscience. The same goes for Iain M. Banks' Culture, Star Trek, and other space opera.
Somewhere in the middle is Warhammer 40k, in which we have both technological 'magic' -- hovercraft, souped-up plasma fusion engines, energy blades, and more -- in addition to something much more like conventional magic yet still bound by certain rules -- warp witchery. I would classify it as sci-fi, but I certainly wouldn't see a problem with calling it fantasy, and you could make excellent arguments either way I'm sure.





I agree about being too rigid. There is a difference between scientific suspension of disbelief and Fantasy. But I don't think that invalidates my position. When writers use FTL, they are admitting that a) there is something called light, b) it has a speed, and c) we need some way to travel faster than that speed. These are all scientific concepts. Likewise, when writing about time travel we agree that there is something called time, it travels in a certain direction at a certain pace, and it would sure be nice to travel along it in the other direction. Again, all scientific.
Many Sci-Fi stories include the invention of some sort of limitless or near-limitless power source. Again, this is valid Sci-Fi, because we can all agree that there is such a thing as energy and we could sure use more of it. But if we make the energy itself both incomprehensible and intelligent, a la the AllSpark, then (in my opinion) we have crossed the line into magic.

You're very welcome. I thought people here would enjoy it.

Fantasy is about, well, fantasy. Mythology, if you wanted to get a little more precise. It's an inner-space thing. A "this is who we are" statement, taken to the extremes of magic and swords because, well, why not dress our psyches up in ren-faire gear and make us fight a dragon? Magic gives us a psychological playground of symbolism to play with, and it's safer, so to speak, to write about dragons than it is to write about alcoholism.
Sci-fi is more about possibility. "This is who we'll become." I think that's why its taken such a dark turn in recent years (Hunger Games is an example). We aren't as optimistic about our future as we were in the seventies. Technology is just the projector. The reason magic doesn't fit well into a sci-fi setting is because you're getting "What we are" into "What we'll become" and it tends to give the reader psychological whiplash.

Fantasy is about, well, fantasy. Mythology, if you wanted to get a little more precise. It's an..."
I think that is one of the best definitions I've ever read. Makes a LOT of sense.

Fantasy is about, well, fantasy. Mythology, if you wanted to get a little more ..."
I tend to overthink things. A lot. Especially if I've had my medication (read as: whiskey sour). I once spent a whole night explaining why The Ghost and the Darkness was a metaphor for the human psyche in time of crisis. :D
I also think that our brains are smarter than we are. We tend to pick up a whole lot subconsciously that our active minds ignore as white noise. So you didn't notice that the dragon is the author's crisis of faith...but your brain did.

FTL and Time Travel are currently thought to be possible by some mainstream physicists like Kaku and Hawking. They aren't entirely convinced, but they say the possibility is there. So if they think those things might be doable, however remote, then we should let those things into the genre.
Everyone quotes Clarke's Third Law (indistinguishable from magic) and they use it as a Get Out of Jail Free card, which is annoying. In cases like FTL it's equally important to keep in mind Clarke's First Law: "When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is possible, he is almost certainly right. When he states that something is impossible, he is very probably wrong." These old guys are saying, "Yeah, maybe." That's good enough for the fiction part of the equation.
There are things we know and there are things we're pretty sure about and then there are things that are still up for grabs. Everything that's beyond the "know" section of science should be part of Science Fiction. I don't see how that's rigid at all.

1. Wormholes or Einstein-Rosen Bridges which are a 'shortcut' through space.
2. Alcubierre drive. Contracting space in front and expanding space behind.
Both of these solutions require exotic matter ? and are consistent with Einstein's field equations.
H


Cue the deluge of counter-examples.
I've written and published a fantasy story with a scientist in it.

I was waiting for someone to make a comment like that!

Incorrect. The Reluctant Swordsman is just such a book. Also Lyndon Hardy has a number of books where magic works by rules and the magic-user has to learn them.
And I forgot Tavi in The Cocex Alera series, who was rediscovering the technical superiority of the Romans.

The difference between Science Fiction and Fantasy is the trees. In Science Fiction, the trees behave as we expect trees to behave, but they look like they were designed by the costumers for Cirque du Soleil. In Fantasy, the trees look like regular trees, but they either try to eat you or talk you to death.

The difference between Science Fiction and Fantasy is the trees."
Brilliant.

Fantasy, on the other hand, implies the presence of something beyond science, like magic, the supernatural, etc.

Sounds like you're using that as a Get Out of Jail Free card, which is not how Clarke intended it.
Also, there's this terrific quote from a similar thread:
“It's just occurred to me that a lot of TV and movie SF is anti-Clarke: not science that looks to the uninitiated like magic, but magic that looks to the uninitiated like science.” – Chris, “Fantasy vs Science Fiction”, Goodreads, 6-3-13

But you are right Trike. Magic (sorcery) and science are hard to distinguish in our current, and even worse our past, state of ignorance.
That is why fantasy and SF coexist, because sometimes it is very hard to tell which will be which.

Which is why it is incumbent upon people like us to stand watch at the gates and make sure the ignorant do not overrun the learned.

It is also very hard to know who is learned and who is ignorant.

If I had that convo to do over again, I would say, "Inventions versus magic, but both are about people." It's the characters that count for most.



Science Fiction explores ideas.
Fantasy explores worlds.
Of course there's overlap/exceptions/what-have-you (Dune, anyone?), but this is the usual explanation I give people.



Fantasy explores worlds."
Weird. Especially since "exploring strange, new worlds" is literally part of the stated theme of the most famous sci-fi franchise extant.
Leigh wrote: "SSci-fi speculates in worlds much like our own, although it might import supernatural elements (soft sci-fi) or technological elements (hard sci-fi). As a rule, fantasy speculates in worlds that have much different rules and settings;"
I also find this statement a bit odd, too. I could probably name a dozen science fictional worlds that are far stranger than anything ever seen in fantasy. Forward's Dragon's Egg, Niven's Ringworld, Chalker's Well World, Baxter's Raft, Varley's Gaea, Lem's Solaris, Vinge's On/Off... you get the idea.
If I were to categorize the two genres broadly, I'd go more along the lines of
Science Fiction blazes trails,
Fantasy walks the beaten path.
Books mentioned in this topic
Watchmen (other topics)Metropolitan (other topics)
Operation Chaos (other topics)
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (other topics)
Perdido Street Station (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Lyndon Hardy (other topics)Arthur C. Clarke (other topics)
Orson Scott Card (other topics)
I addressed that earlier: yes, all literature is fantasy. While true, it's useless. And when on a top..."
But that's how I was being sarcastic and having my fun too! I like to throw those books that people threw at me for my lit studies! :( Love the way you added the definition to add extra condescension factor :p So what I would do too!
But anyway that said I have been thinking recently about opinions. It interests me how apparently to have one of these solid opinion one must back it up with other 'authorities' opinions. I just find it fascinating how we give more weight to those who have spent more years going through an education system. Note to self: must go through education system to likewise join the ranks of the authorities :p
Please note that all the above is my way of having fun too by making tongue in cheek comments. I have full respect for any academic minded person who can go on and study for such lengthy periods of time and write a thesis. My favourite (and best) teacher was writing hers while we were taught by her.