Science Fiction Prototyping. Brian David JohnsonЧитать онлайн книгу.
Alan Moore, Steven Schneider, Nathan Shedroff, Chris Noessell, Mary Shelley, Alan Stelle, H.G. Wells and Paula Zizzi.
Over the years SF prototyping has seen the support of some incredible people and I don’t think we would have made it this far without them: Justin Rattner, Tadayoshi Kohno, Sumi Helal, Duckki Lee, Wolfgang Minker, Michael Weber, Hani Hagras, Achilles D. Kameas, Juan Carlos Augusto, Jeannette Chin, Don Wallace, April Miller, Antonio Tatum, Jim Olsen, Klaus Obermaier, Sean Hanna, Darrin Johnson and Vernor Vinge.
I want acknowledge the University of Washington and Professor Sarah Perez-Kriz’s “Science Fiction Prototyping” class for piloting this book and developing some thoughtful and engaging SF prototypes.
Thanks to Mike Morgan for his courage to publish this book and his enthusiasm for its rather unconventional subject matter.
Sandy Winkelman takes my words and turns them into not just pictures but whole worlds—my collaboration with him has been incredibly important to me and I could never thank him enough 25.
Contents
1. The Future Is in Your Hands
“Shall We Play a Game?”: What You Can Expect from This Book
Religious Robots: Trouble at the Piazzi Mine
3. How to Build Your Own SF Prototype in Five Steps or Less
Step 1: Pick Your Science and Build Your World
Step 2: The Scientific Inflection Point
Step 3: Ramifications of the Science on People
Step 4: The Human Inflection Point
Writing the Outline in Five Easy Steps: An Example of Nebulous Mechanisms
When Science Came to Science Fiction
A Conversation with Cory Doctorow
The Link Between Science and Science Fiction
It Is a Process, Not a Prediction
Turning Your Outline Into Short Story SF Prototype
5. The Men in the Moon: Exploring Movies as an SF Prototype and a Conversation with Sidney Perkowitz
A Music Hall Depiction of Space
A Computer Goes Crazy in Deep Space
A Scientist Who Writes about Hollywood Science
The Men in the Moon: The Motion Picture Moon as an SF Prototype
Turning Your Outline Into Short Film SF Prototype
6. Science in the Gutters: Exploring Comics as an SF Prototype and a Conversation With Chris Warner
A Conversation With Chris Warner