1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9911031561503321

Autore

Chambers Amy C

Titolo

Reading Science/Fiction : Practices, Pleasures and Publics / / by Amy C. Chambers, Lisa Garforth, Miranda Jeanne Marie Iossifidis, Joanna Verran

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Singapore : , : Springer Nature Singapore : , : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2025

ISBN

981-9500-39-7

Edizione

[1st ed. 2025.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (180 pages)

Collana

Social Sciences Series

Altri autori (Persone)

GarforthLisa

IossifidisMiranda Jeanne Marie

VerranJoanna

Disciplina

809.3936

Soggetti

Science - Social aspects

Communication in science

Science in popular culture

Fiction

Popular culture

Technology - Sociological aspects

Science and Technology Studies

Science Communication

Public Understanding of Science

Fiction Literature

Popular Culture

Science, Technology and Society

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Chapter 1 Reading science/fiction: an introduction -- Chapter 2 Making science fiction readers -- Chapter 3 Reading together: remaking worlds with science fiction -- Chapter 4 Book Clubs: Bad Bugs and bioscience fictions -- Chapter 5 Research methods, meeting readers: concluding thoughts.

Sommario/riassunto

This book explores the relationship between reading science in fiction and engaging with science. Focusing on embodied readers and empirical approaches to fiction reading, the authors examine



contemporary social, cultural, biographical and political contexts in which science fictions come to matter. Drawing together a distinctive set of research studies and conceptual resources, the book outlines theories, epistemologies and methodologies for understanding how and why we read science fictions and fictions about science. Dr Amy C. Chambers, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK, is a science and screen media scholar focused on the intersection of entertainment media and the public understanding of science. Her research interrogates public and popular cultures of science; marginalised scientific expertise on screen; and women-created science fiction and horror. Her current research project, 'Women Make Science Fiction', constitutes the first comprehensive study of women (inclusive of trans and non-binary) creators of science fiction. Dr Lisa Garforth, Newcastle University, UK, is a sociologist focusing on the relationship between speculative fiction and social futures. A substantial programme of research on Western post-war environmental imaginaries culminated in her monograph Green Utopias: Environmental Hope Before and After Nature (2017). She led the Newcastle part of the 3-year, 3-centre AHRC project 'Unsettling Scientific Stories investigating contemporary reading practices, speculative fiction and science. Dr Miranda Iossifidis, Newcastle University, UK, is a sociologist interested the collective and creative negotiation of environmental futures in everyday urban culture, speculative fiction, and collective action. She is currently working on a project using creative methods to explore climate anxiety and speculative ecofascist present(s) and futures. Joanna Verran is Professor of Microbiology (Emeritus) at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK. She is a Principal Fellow of the HEA and a National Teaching Fellow. Her laboratory research focuses on the interaction of microorganisms and inert surfaces, but she has also published widely on innovative practices in teaching and in public engagement with science. She set up the Bad Bugs Bookclub in 2009 with the aim of engaging scientists and non-scientists in discussion about novels of fiction that feature infectious disease or microorganisms.