Brave new words / Jeff Prucher and Gene Wolfe
Language: English Publication details: New York : Oxford University Press, 2010.Description: xxxi, 342 p. : ill. ; 19 cmISBN:- 9780195387063 (pbk.)
- 809.3876203 PRU/B
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General Books
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Central Library, IIT Bhubaneswar | Central Library, IIT Bhubaneswar | GEN | 809.3876203 PRU/B (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 11493 |
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| 809.304 MCH/P Postmodernist fiction / | 809.308762 VIN/S Science fiction and cultural theory: a reader / | 809.38762 JAM/C The Cambridge companion to science fiction / | 809.3876203 PRU/B Brave new words / | 809.39113 HUT/P The politics of postmodernism / | 809.39113 HUT/P The politics of postmodernism / | 809.3936 TRE/A Anthropocene fictions: the novel in a time of climate change/ |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
The first historical dictionary devoted to science fiction, Brave New Words:The Oxford Dictionary of Science Fiction shows exactly how science-fictional words and their associated concepts have developed over time, with full citations and bibliographic information. It's a window on a whole genre of literature through the words invented and passed along by the genre's most talented writers. In addition, it shows how many words we consider everyday vocabulary-words like "space shuttle," "blast off," and "robot"-had their roots in imaginative literature, and not in hard science.
Brave New Words covers the shared language of science fiction, as well as the vocabulary of science fiction criticism and its fans—those terms that are used by many authors in multiple settings. Words coined in science fiction have become part of the vocabulary of any number of subcultures and endeavors, from comics, to neo-paganism, to aerospace, to computers, to environmentalism, to zine culture. This is the first book to document this vocabulary transfer. Not just a useful reference and an entertaining browse, this book also documents the enduring legacy of science fiction writers and fans.
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