Space Suit History

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spacesuit.jpgSpace suits, which are an extension of underwater suits, have a long history in both fiction and real life. Project RHO has a pretty interesting pictorial history of the space suit that include a bit of both fact and fiction.

The page includes photos from NASA and illustrations from the pulp magazines. It’s a pretty interesting read, too.

The website has several pages dedicated to various topics such as future history, artificial gravity, side arms and more.

Explore “Atomic Rockets” here.

    Science Fiction and Fear

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    bodysnatcher.jpgA lot of science fiction stories explore different aspects of fear, most especially the fear of loss:

    • loss of self or identity,
    • loss of autonomy or freedom,
    • loss of values held dear,

    and more. One of the classics that has been reinterpreted numerous times, including last year’s Nicole Kidman and Daniel Craig film, The Invasion,, is The Body Snatchers by Jack Finney.

    Written in 1955, the book has inspired four films and, doubtless, more to come. I found this very interesting article about the history and the different ways in which human duplicates have been used in fiction and film at the National Post. Check it out — it is quite interesting:

    Scott Van Wynsberghe: A brief history of body-snatching

      A Link Between Future Thinking and Science Fiction

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      futurethink.jpgI recently read Mike Treder’s Aug. 14, 2007, post at ieet.org about “Post-Millennial Malaise in SF?” and it got me to thinking about the link between future thinking and science fiction.

      I can’t remember if I mentioned this before, but there is a pretty good theory about the rise of science fiction that says science fiction couldn’t exist until people realized that the future was going to be different than today. Basically, people’s lives were pretty much the same as the lives of their parents until the Industrial Revolution brought rapid change to society.

      So, fast-forward to today where change is so fast, and so constant that people’s lives can change radically — several times even — within their own lifetime. Now its not just my grandchildren or children who will live their lives differently, but myself.
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        Childhood Memories: Starman

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        Sorry for the long break — long story that I don’t need to go into here. But I’m back now and hope to post much more regularly!

        starmandvd.jpgThis Christmas I asked for and received the Starman DVD set. For those of you who do not know of which I speak, Starman was a Japanese superhero created in the late 1950s and based on Superman. In Japan, he was known as Supergiant and was the star of several 50-minute serials. In the early 1960s, Walter Manly Enterprises acquired the U.S. right and cut them together into six 75-minute films, dubbed in English for American television consumption.

        These were the films I grew up on. I loved Starman — I think I had a pre-teen crush on him. I used to play Starman at recess and pretend that I was a part of the films I watched on the weekend.
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