Description
Journalism, by its very nature, is limited, often adhering to a repetitive format and narration style. Consequently, the depth of journalistic stories will always hit a barrier. Fiction, on the other hand, provides an elegant solution by exploring the world through a myriad point of views including complete omniscience. This thesis explores the link between journalism and fiction by taking real-world scenarios and exploring them without journalism's limitations. It includes three novellas totaling 25,000 words drawn from true-to-life research papers, news stories and manifestos to paint a realistic picture of a technological reality in the near future, a style of writing one might call futurecasting. The thesis also contains an analysis of the techniques used in contemporary fiction and an analysis of their implementation within the novellas. The goal of the novellas is to let researchers to explore the impact of their work before its mass dissemination in order to shape societal, national and international policy responsibly. Similarly, novellas like this and others similar allow society to discover the beauty of science through fiction. These are some of fiction's greatest roles in science and society.
Details
Title
- Fiction's Role in Science and Society: An Analysis and Implementation
Contributors
- Pacini, Jason Daniel (Author)
- Zachary, Gregg (Thesis director)
- Russell, Dennis (Committee member)
- Giarrusso, Theresa Walsh (Committee member)
- Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
- Department of Physics (Contributor)
- Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication (Contributor)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2013-05
Subjects
Resource Type
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