As a member of the Young Author’s club of your school, write a science fiction publication in which you express your dissatisfaction or anxieties about aspects of the society you live in and what you think the future holds for our modern world and the next generation.
Checklist:
● Include all the conventions of science fiction
● Word limit: 750-1000
● Use ambitious vocabulary
● Accurate punctuation and spelling
● Clear paragraphs with appropriate transitional words
● Include elements of dystopian science fiction
Answers
Answer:
Science fiction (sometimes shortened to sci-fi or SF) is a genre of speculative fiction that typically deals with imaginative and futuristic concepts such as advanced science and technology, space exploration, time travel, parallel universes, and extraterrestrial life. It has been called the "literature of ideas", and often explores the potential consequences of scientific, social, and technological innovations.[1][2]
The alien invasion featured in H. G. Wells' 1897 novel The War of the Worlds, as illustrated in an iconic drawing by Henrique Alvim Corrêa.
Space exploration, as predicted in August 1958 in the science fiction magazine Imagination.
Non-fiction whose roots go back to ancient times, is related to fantasy, horror, and superhero fiction, and contains many subgenres. Its exact definition has long been disputed among authors, critics, scholars, and readers.
Science fiction literature, film, television, and other media have become popular and influential over much of the world. Besides providing entertainment, it can also criticize present-day society, and is often said to inspire a "sense of wonder".[3]
The classic elements of a science fiction novel include:
-Time travel
-Teleportation
-Mind control, telepathy, and telekinesis
-Aliens, extraterrestrial lifeforms, and mutants.
-fictional characters.
The harms have begun to come into view just over the past few years, and the trend line is moving consistently in a negative direction. I am mainly worried about corporate and governmental power to surveil users (attendant loss of privacy and security), about the degraded public sphere and its new corporate owners that care not much for sustaining democratic governance.