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Science Fiction
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"There's a poetry in the materials we use to construct our world of artifacts; it speaks of our long history as a technological species."
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This is probably the first use of this term.
This helpful word found itself into many breezy statements about space. For example, this usage in The Impossible World (1939) by Eando Binder:
Here's another example from Jurisdiction (1941), by Nat Schachner:
From Sunward Flight (1943) by Leo Zagat:
From The Cavern of the Shining Pool (1943) by Leo Zagat:
From Contagion (1950) by Katherine MacLean:
Compare to the space-lanes from Crashing Suns, the 1928 classic by Edmond Hamilton and to space traffic from Satan in Exile (1935) by Arthur William Bernal. Comment/Join this discussion ( 0 ) | RSS/XML | Blog This | Additional
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