Jayaprakash Satyamurthy
Knivesout no more
Here's an interesting reading list compiled by China Mieville called 'Fifty Fantasy & Science Fiction Works That Socialists Should Read' : http://www.fantasticmetropolis.com/show.html?rw,50socialist,1
I'm a political agnostic if anything, but there is a real interest in politically engaged fiction, and the list is quite sweeping, from works where the political or social themes are covert, like M John Harrison's Viriconium to Ursula Le Guin's piercing examination of capitalist and communist utopias in The Disposessed. Apart from that, Mieville's blurbs for each book are concise and admirably expressive. I can't resist quoting his take on one of my least favourite works of speculative politics:
Ayn Rand -- Atlas Shrugged (1957)
Know your enemy. This panoply of portentous Nietzcheanism lite has had a huge influence on American SF. Rand was an obsessive "objectivist" (libertarian pro-capitalist individualist) whose hatred of socialism and any form of "collectivism" is visible in this important and influential -- though vile and ponderous -- novel.
I'm a political agnostic if anything, but there is a real interest in politically engaged fiction, and the list is quite sweeping, from works where the political or social themes are covert, like M John Harrison's Viriconium to Ursula Le Guin's piercing examination of capitalist and communist utopias in The Disposessed. Apart from that, Mieville's blurbs for each book are concise and admirably expressive. I can't resist quoting his take on one of my least favourite works of speculative politics:
Ayn Rand -- Atlas Shrugged (1957)
Know your enemy. This panoply of portentous Nietzcheanism lite has had a huge influence on American SF. Rand was an obsessive "objectivist" (libertarian pro-capitalist individualist) whose hatred of socialism and any form of "collectivism" is visible in this important and influential -- though vile and ponderous -- novel.