Remembering Futures Past

Guest Post by The Zman

A few times a year, I re-read some classic science fiction, just for some variety, but also to see if it still works. One of the funny things about our age is the past is increasingly more alien to us than any imagined future. Reading stories, written in the 1950’s, that depicted life in the far off future, you get some insights into the society that laid the groundwork for our age. Often times, though, it reveals the foolishness and, in retrospect, absurd optimism, about the future and technology common in the last century.

-----------------------------------------------------
It is my sincere desire to provide readers of this site with the best unbiased information available, and a forum where it can be discussed openly, as our Founders intended. But it is not easy nor inexpensive to do so, especially when those who wish to prevent us from making the truth known, attack us without mercy on all fronts on a daily basis. So each time you visit the site, I would ask that you consider the value that you receive and have received from The Burning Platform and the community of which you are a vital part. I can't do it all alone, and I need your help and support to keep it alive. Please consider contributing an amount commensurate to the value that you receive from this site and community, or even by becoming a sustaining supporter through periodic contributions. [Burning Platform LLC - PO Box 1520 Kulpsville, PA 19443] or Paypal

-----------------------------------------------------
To donate via Stripe, click here.
-----------------------------------------------------
Use promo code ILMF2, and save up to 66% on all MyPillow purchases. (The Burning Platform benefits when you use this promo code.)

The old science fiction guys got some things right about the future. Jules Verne, who is the father of science fiction, had amazing insights into the future of technology. You can read Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea today and it still holds up pretty well. On the other hand, a lot of science fiction turned out to be wildly wrong about the future, even by the standards of fiction. I recently re-read The Martian Chronicles and it is laugh out loud terrible in parts. It’s corn-ball pulp fiction now.

Of course, people were much more optimistic about the future in the heyday of science fiction writing. If you would have told Ray Bradbury in the 1950’s that man would not be on Mars by 2018, he would have thought you were a ridiculous pessimist. Of course man would be exploring the solar system in the 21st century. We would have conquered human suffering, united as one and be riding around in nuclear powered flying cars. Instead, the future is trans-gendered otherkins stalking your daughters in public toilets.

We can’t blame the people of the last century for not seeing this stuff coming. We’re living it and it still seems impossibly insane. For Americans in the 1950’s, optimism about the future was natural. America had conquered the world, saving Western Civilization from itself. Technological progress was making life comfortable, even for the poorest. There was no reason to think we were heading for a bad turn. It’s a good lesson that no matter how bad things are now, they can get worse. The future is not written.

Reading The Martian Chronicles, I was reminded of something that turns up in old black and white movies. That is the acceptance of casual violence. In the 1950’s, fictional characters would say things like, “You better give it to me straight or I’ll bash your teeth in” to some other character playing a store clerk. In one of the Bradbury stories, a man from earth arrives on Mars and starts talking with the Martians. The conversations are peppered with threats of personal violence, but in a casual, haphazard manner.

Imagine going into the local retail store and seeing one of the customers telling the clerk that he was going to bash in his skull if he did not hop to it. I doubt fist fights were a regular feature down at the piggly-wiggly, but the threat of personal violence was a common occurrence in movies and fiction. It is not unreasonable to think that the people in the audiences for this stuff found it perfectly normal that men talked to one another in this way, which suggests it was how people talked in their normal lives.

Similarly, most of the characters in Bradbury’s future smoked. In one story, the first thing the earth men do when they land on Mars is have a smoke. Maybe Bradbury was a smoker, but his best writing is when describing the joys of smoking on Mars. I guess it makes sense to think that the future will have better versions of the stuff you really enjoy today. Imagine going back in time and telling sci-fi writers that in the future, men would not only not be on Mars, but smoking would be a crime. They’d think you were crazy.

The other thing about old sci-fi, and it jumps out in The Martian Chronicles, is the fascination people had back then with rockets and nuclear technology. It makes perfect sense. Both seemed impossibly amazing to the people of the time. The fascination with nuclear energy is amusing in hindsight. Science fiction writers 70 years ago thought it was perfectly logical that tiny nuclear reactors would replace all of our energy sources. Still, nuclear powered garments to keep you warm at night is laughably silly in hindsight.

Putting that aside, it is amusing to look back at these conceptions of the future. Many were wildly wrong, because they wanted to be wildly wrong. It is fiction, after all. It’s easy to forget that writers in the first half of the last century were expecting their stuff to be read by men with high school level educations. Granted, a 1950’s high school education was much more than what we see today, but the audience was not a collection of literary sophisticates. The job of the writer was to entertain, not lecture, the reader.

Still, reading old science fiction has a utility to our age, that goes beyond mere amusement. The people of that era, producing this stuff, were very optimistic about the future. They were committed to building a better world. Granted, it all went to shit in the 60’s and we have yet to pull out of the death spiral, but they did not know what they could not know. Our generations don’t have that excuse. We have the hard lessons of failed social experimentation. We have no excuse for tolerating this stuff. We know better.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
9 Comments
Diogenes
Diogenes
January 19, 2018 4:09 pm

This has nothing to do with your article, however, my favorite science fiction novel is “The Void Captain’s Tale” by Norman Spinrad.

i forget
i forget
January 19, 2018 5:10 pm

Plenty wild•optimists re the 50’s still around & regaling today. Bein’ born bubbly, & in a bubble(born o’ rubble – Bastiat window style) ain’t much different than bein’ born with a silver spoon in yer mouth.

Bubbles tend to corrupt & bubbleheads tend to absolute corruption.

That optimism, progress, happy endings, sells does not necessarily mean the sellers of these tropes & formulaics are optimists themselves. (But the best sellers do tend to believer their own…pitches.)

W•optimists will continue bringin’ dull knives (knaves?) to gunfights. They can’t help it. These buttons were made for pushin.’

Andrea Iravani
Andrea Iravani
January 19, 2018 5:43 pm

Very amusing and entertaining Zman! As a child born in the is sixties, I also miss the optimism and magical future of I Dream of Jeannie, Bewitched, The Flying Nun, The Jetsons, Dr. Who, James Bond at tbe drive-in and Disney.

It is more like The Blob, Godzilla, and King Kong, which I also saw at the drive-ins. Throw in Get Smart and The Pink Panther, saw the latter at the drive-in too.

unit472/
unit472/
January 19, 2018 6:02 pm

Since a sci-fi story needs human characters it is not surprising that the ease with which humans would go into space was mistaken. Even if a writer pondered the physics of the problem virtually nothing was known about the actual environment of ‘space’ and its effect on human biology until… NOW!

OTOH alot of the gizmos and gadgets of comic book and TV’s have become real. Dick Tracys wrist watch and Maxwell Smarts shoe phone are even more advanced than their creators imagined. It is a scientific miracle that people can pin point their location on the planet and send video to someone else thousands of miles away at no real cost.

NASA’s space telescopes have revealed a universe even more vast and spectacular then anyone imagined 50 years ago and the James Webb Telescope will no doubt amaze us even more. All that is so far missing are aliens and I’m not so sure we really want to discover be discovered by them. A fossilized microbe on Mars or a fish under the ice of Europa might be enough of an answer to the question ‘are we alone’.

SemperFido
SemperFido
January 19, 2018 8:41 pm

We thought we were going to get Star Trek. Instead we get Jihad. Reality sucks.

TS
TS
January 19, 2018 10:19 pm

After reading this, I went and looked through my library. I settled on a 2-vol set edited by Brian Aldiss called Galactic Empires. All short stories by the sci-fi pioneers; Clarke, Asimov, Simak, Anderson, etc.
The stories are in sections, all dealing with different levels of Empire development. They are: Rise and Shine, Maturity or Bust, and Decline and Freefall. The section names are pretty self-explanatory.
It’s really well done. Fascinating to see such a diverse selection. Has just about every point of view, from wonderful future to dystopian nightmare.

Anonymous
Anonymous
January 20, 2018 12:04 am

‘America had conquered the world, saving Western Civilization from itself.’
Yes, you’ve created quite the Utopia.

Ozum
Ozum
January 20, 2018 12:36 am

Best for me, and read lots, “E.E. Doc Smith, The lensman Series. ” FWIW

Desertrat
Desertrat
January 20, 2018 11:37 am

Seems like we’re living in Heinlein’s “Crazy Years”. The headlines are the same.