Science fantasy

Okładka magazynu Imagination z października 1950.

Science fantasy – podgatunek fantastyki, który zawiera elementy zarówno fantastyki naukowej, jak i fantasy, a czasem również horroru[1]. Według The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction definicja tego gatunku nie została nigdy jasno określona, a określenie to najpowszechniej stosowano w latach 1950–1966[1]. Jako przykład science fantasy często wymienia się serię Gwiezdne wojny, a także Transformers czy Dragon Ball[2][3][1].

Akcja tego typu historii często rozgrywa się w przyszłości. Typowej dla fantastyki naukowej technologii często towarzyszą baśniowe, lub mitologiczne stworzenia typowe dla fantasy[4].

Zobacz też

  • space opera

Przypisy

  1. a b c Peter Nicholls: Science Fantasy (ang.). sf-encyclopedia.com, 20 czerwca 2012. [dostęp 2013-06-23].
  2. Amelia Hill: Star Wars FAQ: Is Star Wars Sci-Fi or Fantasy? (ang.). scifi.about.com. [dostęp 2013-06-23].
  3. John Scalzi: Science Fiction vs. Science Fantasy (ang.). blogs.amctv.com, 2011-02-16. [dostęp 2013-06-23]. [zarchiwizowane z tego adresu (2013-06-14)].
  4. Gatunki fantasy, czyli jakie są rodzaje fantasy, „Lektura Obowiązkowa”, 26 lipca 2015 [dostęp 2018-05-04] (pol.).

Media użyte na tej stronie

Imagination cover October 1950.jpg
Imagination magazine cover

Web source: Internet Speculative Fiction Database

Since the magazine was published in the U.S. before 1964, the original copyright lasted 27 years from the end of the year of publication. The copyright holder was free to renew the copyright any time during the year 1978, but they did not do so. (All copyright renewals since 1977 are on file at the United States Copyright Office, and can be searched online.

The copyright has expired.

Cover by Hannes Bok, pseudonym of Wayne Woodward. No copyright renewal by artist or compilation copyright of magazine in Copyright Catalog. This is a simple scan of the cover with no basis for copyright as derivative work. It's in the public domain. Apparently scanned by Bill Kemp or Howard DeVore.[1] Higher resolution .jpg of this scan is available at that site.

"Copyrights whose first 28-year term of copyright was secured between January 1, 1950, and December 31, 1963, including works protected in their first term under the Universal Copyright Convention, still had to be renewed within strict time limits in order to receive the maximum statutory duration. U.S. adherence to the Berne Convention did not alter this requirement. Renewal registration had to be made within a year period beginning on December 31 of the 27th year of the copyright and running through December 31 of the following year. If a valid renewal registration was made at the proper time, the second term lasts for 67 years. This is 39 years longer than the 28-year renewal term provided under the 1909 law and makes the two terms of protection for the renewed copyright last for a total of 95 years. However, if renewal registration was not made within the statutory time limits, these copyrights expired at the end of their first terms

and protection was lost permanently."[2]