Results for subject : "POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT"
'Ask What You Can Do For Your Country': The Film Version of H. G. Wells's The Time Machine and the Cold War
Literature/Film Quarterly 17(3):177-187. 1989.
'I Think the Government Stinks!': Stephen King's Stand on Politics
in: Magistrale, Tony, ed. A Casebook on The Stand. San Bernardino, CA: Borgo Press, 1992. pp.21-36.
'In Every Revolution, There is One Man with a Vision': The Governments of the Future in Comparative Perspective
in: Hassler, Donald M. and Wilcox, Clyde, eds. Political Science Fiction. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 1997. pp. 183-195.
'Starry-Eyed Internationalists' versus the Social Darwinists: Heinlein's Transnational Governments
Extrapolation 40(1): 53-70. Spring 1999.
'We Owe It to Them to Interfere': Star Trek and U. S. Statecraft in the 1960s and the 1990s
in: Hassler, Donald M. and Wilcox, Clyde, eds. Political Science Fiction. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 1997. pp. 234-250.
'We Owe It to Them to Interfere': Star Trek and U.S. Statecraft in the 1960s and 1990s
Extrapolation 34(3): 251-264. Fall 1993.
1886: Past Views of Ireland's Future
Foundation 36:21-30. Summer 1986.
A Brazilian Metafktion: Paulo de Sousa Ramos's Dystopian Novella
in: Hassler, Donald M./Wilcox, Clyde, eds. New Boundaries in Political Science Fiction. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 2008. p. 212-222.
A Case for Insomnia: Pod People Became a Chilling Metaphor for the Cold War in Sci-Fi's Ultimate Paean to Paranoia, Invasion of the Body Snatchers
American Cinematographer 78(3): 77-81. March 1997.
A Last Situation: Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Cultural Critic Leslie Fiedler
in: Hassler, Donald M./Wilcox, Clyde, eds. New Boundaries in Political Science Fiction. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 2008. p. 339-352. POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT
A Political History of SF
Steam Engine Time No. 5: 8-11. September 2006.
A Reflection on Tolkien's World: Gender, Race & Interpreted Political, Economic, Social & Cultural Allegories
http://www.justbooks.co.uk/cmt_article.asp?GettaID=214 (Courtely of sffworld-Science Fiction and Fantasy World). 5 pp.
A Truly American Enterprise: Star Trek's Post-9/11 Politics
in: Hassler, Donald M./Wilcox, Clyde, eds. New Boundaries in Political Science Fiction. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 2008. p. 157-166.
After Heinlein: Politics in Scalzi's Green Soldier Universe,
Vector No. 258: 17-16. Winter 2008.
Aiming to Misbehave: Role Modeling Political-Economic Conditions and Political Action in the Serenityverse
Slayage 7(1): 15 p.] Winter 2008. (No. 25)
Aliens, Alien Nations, and Alienation in American Political Economy and Popular Culture
in: Weldes, Jutta, Ed. To Seek Out New Worlds: Science Fiction and World Politics. New York: Palgrave/Macmillan, 2003. p. 79-98.
Alternate Heinlein: The Politics of For Us, The Living
Heinlein Journal No. 14: 23-26. January 2004.
Always Coming Home: Pacifism and Anarchy in Le Guin's Latest Utopia
Extrapolation 28(4):330-339. Winter 1987.
American Demagogue in Barsoom, An
Journal of Popular Culture 1(3): 263-275. Winter 1967.
American Values and World View as Reflected in Science Fiction
Ph.D. Dissertation, Bryn Bawr, 1977. 378 p.
Anti-Communism and Ambivalence in Red Planet Mars, Invasion USA, and The Beast of Yucca Flats
Science Fiction Studies 28(2): 246-260. July 2001.
Anti-Imperialism in the Buffyverse: Challenging the Mythos of Bush as Vampire Slayer
Poroi 3(2): [14 p.] December 2004.
Avenues of Power: Cities as the Mindscapes of Politics
in: Slusser, George E. and Rabkin, Eric S., eds. Mindscapes. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1989. pp.174-184.
Biological Determinism, Masculine Politics and the Failure of Libertarianism in Robert A. Heinlein's The Moon is a Harsh Mistress,
Foundation No. 104: 10-22. Winter 2008.
Building Cosmopolis: The Political Thought of H. G. Wells
Ph. D. Dissertation, University of Reading, UK, 2000. [Not seen.]
Found 241 items on 10 pages.


