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- Title
Mars and the Paranormal.
- Authors
Crossley, Robert
- Abstract
The parallel emergence of modern Martian studies and psychical research in the later nineteenth century led to a strange fusion of the literary imagination and spiritualist practices. Both Percival Lowell and Camille Flammarion were drawn into this association, the latter far more committedly than the former. The turn-of-the-century case of the Swiss medium Hélène Smith, who claimed to have traveled to Mars and learned the Martian language, is a celebrated instance of the link between Mars and the paranormal, but the phenomena of telepathy and astral projection also make their way into such sf narratives as Wells's "The War of the Worlds" (1898), Burroughs's "A Princess of Mars" (1912), Stapledon's "Last and First Men" (1930), and Lewis's "Out of the Silent Planet" (1938). The extent and significance of the role of the paranormal in early sf can be most fully grasped in less well known narratives by Henry Gaston, Flammarion, George DuMaurier, Louis Pope Gratacap, Mark Wicks, Sara Weiss, J. L. Kennon, and J. W. Gilbert. Collectively, these narratives reveal the persistence of the problematic issue of the interweaving of science (or pseudoscience) and romance in the fashioning of fiction about Mars.
- Subjects
MARS (Planet); OCCULTISM &; science; LOWELL, Percival, 1855-1916; FLAMMARION, Camille, 1842-1925; PRINCESS of Mars, A (Book); ASTROGEOLOGY
- Publication
Science Fiction Studies, 2008, Vol 35, Issue 3, p466
- ISSN
0091-7729
- Publication type
Literary Criticism