Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Bradbury, Ray (Vol. 29) - Steven Dimeo (essay date 1972)
Bradbury, Ray (Vol. 29) - Steven Dimeo (essay date 1972)
Steven Dimeo (essay date 1972)
SOURCE: "Man and Apollo: A Look at Religion in the Science Fantasies of Ray Bradbury," in Journal of Popular Culture, Vol. 5, No. 4, Spring, 1972, pp. 970-78.
[In the essay below, Dimeo uncovers moralism in Bradbury's short fiction.]
Although religious thinking in the space age has been largely dominated by Nietzschean apostasy, science fiction itself seems to be giving more and more attention to man's relationship with the divine. Religious themes have long been treated in the genre but the first to give it serious and even literary consideration was C. S. Lewis in his trilogy Out of the Silent Planet (1938), Perelandra (1944), and That Hideous Strength (1945) which lofted the Christian mythology complete with angels and devils into tangible planetary realms. Since then the more notable examples of science fiction with more innovative religious implications have included Gore Vidal's...
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Criticism
- Christopher Isherwood (review date 1950)
- Gilbert Highet (essay date 1965)
- Damon Knight (essay date 1967)
- Russell Kirk (essay date 1969)
- Steven Dimeo (essay date 1972)
- Kent Forrester (essay date 1976)
- Willis E. McNelly (essay date 1976)
- A. James Stupple (essay date 1976)
- Wayne L. Johnson (essay date 1978)
- Thomas M. Disch (review date 1980)
- Orson Scott Card (review date 1980)
- Hazel Pierce (essay date 1980)
- Robert Plank (essay date 1981)
- Stephen King (essay date 1981)
- David Mogen (essay date 1986)
- Ray Bradbury (essay date 1987)
- William F. Touponce (essay date 1989)
- Further Reading
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