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  1. Even in the sphere of Anglophone sf, Mike Ashley has strongly argued in his Transformations: The Story of the Science Fiction Magazines 1950-1970 (2005) that the true Golden Age – the one which really sparkled with a huge diversity of talent – was 1950-1954 with its flood of new and re-emerging writers (Philip K Dick, Philip José Farmer ...

  2. The Golden Age of Science Fiction, often identified in the United States as the years 19381946, [1] was a period in which a number of foundational works of science fiction literature appeared.

  3. Welcome to the Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, Fourth Edition. Some sample entries appear below. Click here for the Introduction; here for the masthead; here for Acknowledgments; here for the FAQ; here for advice on citations.

  4. 14 de out. de 2020 · It has been said that the golden age of sf, for any particular reader, is when that reader was 14, but the traditionally accepted beginning of the golden age is 1938, when some of the great writers of modern American sf began to appear . . .

  5. The original idea – as was often the case in the 1940s Golden Age of SF – was largely Campbell's. Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) had said that "If the stars should appear one night in a thousand years, how men would believe and adore"; but Campbell suggested to Asimov that something else might happen.

  6. Grown men and women, sixty years old, twenty-five years old, sit around and talk about ‘the golden age of science fiction’, remembering when every story was a masterwork of daring, original thought. Some say the golden age was circa 1928; some say 1939; some favor 1953, or 1970.

  7. For most scholars and fans, the Golden Age of Science Fiction describes the era of science fiction writing from the end of the 1930s to around 1950. During this time, a specific form of sf came into being that challenged the prejudices of literary inferiority and juvenile escapism which had haunted 1920s and 1930s sf writing.