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Damien Broderick

Damien Broderick reviews 'Life Among the Scientists' by Max Charlesworth, Lyndsay Farrall, Terry Stokes and David Turnbull

April 1990, no. 119 01 April 1990
It’s a lovely idea – to go among the scientists in a pith helmet, learn their lingo, suss out what’s really going on behind the myths of cool objectivity. Like any other major human undertaking, science is a matter of interests, conscious or covert, set by policy and ideology alike. Such factors are all too easily accepted as inevitable and innocent; think of the male-dominated, reductive ca ... (read more)

Damien Broderick reviews 'The MUP Encyclopaedia of Australian Science Fiction & Fantasy' edited by Paul Collins

October 1998, no. 205 01 October 1998
Science Fiction (speculative fiction, sf, sci-fi, whatever) is not much more than a century old. H.G. Wells called his pioneering efforts ‘scientific romances’, still a good name, and his wonderfully fecund The Time Machine and War of the Worlds were published as late as 1895 and 1898. So Australia as a Europeanised nation is even younger than this ‘space age’ genre. If you push it back to ... (read more)