Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Bradbury, Ray (Vol. 29) - David Mogen (essay date 1986)

Bradbury, Ray (Vol. 29) - David Mogen (essay date 1986)

David Mogen (essay date 1986)

SOURCE: "Entering the Space Frontier: Quests Mundane, Profane, and Divine," in Ray Bradbury, Twayne Publishers, 1986, pp. 63-81.

[In the following essay, Mogen explores mythopoetic elements in Bradbury's space-frontier fiction.]

Bradbury's space-colonization fiction integrates two major myth systems to express the significance of mankind entering unearthly new environments: the biblical myths of the Garden and the Promised Land, and the American myth of the frontier. In fusing these myth systems Bradbury participates in an American literary tradition extending from contemporary science fiction back to initial responses to the New World of America. Since the first ambivalent Puritan accounts of their errand into the wilderness, American writing about frontier experience has evoked, explicitly or implicitly, these biblical analogies. And, given the strength of this tradition of frontier writing, it was only...

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