Contemporary science fiction, particularly television science fiction, does not often deal with the Holocaust, and when it does it does so in relatively allegorical terms. The most concrete references to it occur in "Genesis of the Daleks" and the 3rd and 4th seasons of Babylon 5, but both series ultimately shy away from the precipice. I think that for the genre to evolve, it has to be willing to take such portrayals to the hilt. For instance, a depiction of an interstellar Nazi state could be a major work of art, if done correctly, and a good cautionary tale as well. Some of the best depictions of the Holocaust have come from alternative history tales, such as The Portage to San Cristobal of A.H., Boys from Brazil, After Dachau, and Iron Dream. These are truly memorable portrayals of evil that deserve and demand a second reading. More complex visions of fascism, such as those offered in movies like The Believer and books like Hitler and the Power of Aesthetics. Realizing that Nazism has a perverse fascination on us that is not always salutatory will go a long way to at least partially mitigating its evils. I hope that in the future, television sci-fi can have the courage to show the Shoah, in the hopes of creating a more productive dialogue about what might have been, had the Nazis won the war.
Category: Politics
Friday, September 3, 2010
The Holocaust and Contemporary Science Fiction
Labels:
Babylon 5,
Genesis of the Daleks,
Holocaust,
Nazis,
politics,
science fiction,
Shoah
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John, I like your writing. I would love to have you repost your stuff on my site. You could just do part of it and link back to yours if you would like. It doesn't have to be the newest thing, you can repost older articles. I will send you the invite.
ReplyDeleteHey Budd,
ReplyDeleteYea, I'd love to help out. It'll have to be stuff I post here and repost on your blog though. Is that o.K? Let me know.
perfectly fine.
ReplyDelete