Human culture and science fiction: a review of the literature, 1980-2016

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Menadue, Christopher Benjamin;Cheer, Karen Diane
Abstract

This article aimed to uncover the foci, themes, and findings of research literature that utilized science fiction content or concepts to describe and illustrate human culture. To capture a representative range of research, the PRISMA process was applied to database searches across a range of disciplines, not restricted to science fiction journals. Findings revealed that science fiction literature has been used in research across disciplines including theology, semantics, natural sciences, and education. Two characteristics of the use of science fiction in research became evident in the review: its role as a tool for advocacy and cultural insight and its effectiveness as an aid to learning and teaching. An unclear boundary between real science and science in the public imagination is problematic for research success, but the purposeful integration of fictional representations of science (both natural and social) into the research story has demonstrable benefits. To address the limited application of objective methodologies, adoption of increasingly robust quantitative analysis into research in the fields of literature and culture is recommended. This would assist in bridging the two cultures divide between the humanities and natural sciences.

Journal

SAGE Open

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Volume

7

ISBN/ISSN

2158-2440

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Issue

3

Pages Count

15

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Publisher

Sage

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Publisher Location

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Date

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EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.1177/2158244017723690