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Scientific marvelous

Scientific marvelous (also spelled with a hyphen: scientific-marvelous) is a literary genre that developed in France from the end of the 19th century to the middle of the 20th century. Akin today to science fiction, this literature of scientific imagination revolves around key themes such as mad scientists and their extraordinary inventions, lost worlds, exploration of the solar system, catastrophes and the advent of supermen.

A few themes from the scientific-marvelous genre, clockwise: the omnipresence of urban air transport, prehistoric creatures rampaging through Paris, artificial man, interplanetary flight and extraterrestrial encounters... Illustrations by Thomas Girard-Prince Gigi for Le Vingtième Siècle. La vie électrique by Albert Robida, L'Effrayante Aventure by Jules Lermina, La Poupée sanglante [fr] by Gaston Leroux and Doctor Omega by Arnould Galopin.

Emerging in the wake of Jules Verne's scientific novels, this literary current took shape in the second half of the 19th century, moving away from the Verne model and centering on a new generation of authors such as Albert Robida, Camille Flammarion, J.-H. Rosny aîné and Maurice Renard, the latter claiming the works of the more imaginative novelists Edgar Allan Poe and H. G. Wells as his model. Consequently, in 1909 Renard published a manifesto in which he appropriated a neologism coined in the 19th century, "scientific marvelous", adding a hyphen to emphasize the link between the modernization of the fairy tale and the rationalization of the supernatural. Thus defined, the scientific-marvelous novel, set within a rational framework, relies on the alteration of a scientific law around which the plot is built, in order to give the reader food for thought by presenting the threats and delights of science.

Mainly employed by popular novelists, this genre draws on the sciences and pseudo-sciences that resonate with public opinion, such as radiographic, electrical and biological discoveries. However, despite the theoretical foundation provided by Maurice Renard in 1909, scientific-marvelous literature failed to take shape as a literary movement, and in the end constituted no more than a heterogeneous and scattered literary whole. Despite the arrival of a new generation of authors such as José Moselli [fr], René Thévenin [fr], Théo Varlet [fr], Jacques Spitz and André Maurois, this literature failed to renew itself and gradually declined from the 1930s onwards, while at the same time, in the United States, literature of scientific imagination enjoyed great success under the name of "science fiction", with a broadening of its themes. Presented as a new genre, science fiction arrived in France in the 1950s and, seducing French authors and readers, completed the demise of the scientific-marvelous current and its generations of writers.

A marginal and unassumed genre during the second half of the 20th century, the scientific marvelous has been the subject of renewed public attention since the late 1990s, thanks to the critical work of a number of researchers and the reappropriation of this forgotten literary genre by authors, particularly in the comic strip medium.

Origins edit

 
Published in the first half of the 19th century, Edgar Allan Poe's novels and short stories frequently use the figure of the scientist and the theme of scientific discovery,[1] prefiguring the scientific-marvelous genre.
 
John Progrès, protector genius of modern times in Le Monde tel qu'il sera [fr], a futuristic novel by Émile Souvestre (1846).

Although some authors, such as Rabelais, experimented with conjectural literature early on in their fictional careers,[2] it wasn't until the 19th century that the genre really took off.[3] In fact, as early as the end of the eighteenth century, Charles Georges Thomas Garnier [fr] began publishing his "Voyages imaginaires, songes, visions et romans cabalistiques [fr]" between 1787 and 1789, the first collection devoted to the literature of the imaginary.[4] In its thirty-six volumes, the collection offers seventy-four conjectural tales on the themes of utopia, exploration and scientific anticipation.[5]

In the 19th century, despite a short-lived attempt at structuring, literature of this kind remained scattered and diffusely published. In 1834, Félix Bodin [fr] attempted to catalogue all the inventions from which humans could benefit in Le Roman de l'avenir [fr]. The following year, Edgar Allan Poe published The Unparalleled Adventure of One Hans Pfaall, a journalistic hoax detailing a man's incredible journey to the Moon. In 1846, Émile Souvestre published Le Monde tel qu'il sera [fr], an anticipation tale set in the year 3000. It is still considered a major work of dystopian literature. In 1854, C. I. Defontenay broke new ground in scientific fantasy literature with the publication of Star ou Ψ de Cassiopée [fr]. The novel included detailed descriptions of the habits and customs of an extraterrestrial civilization.[6] However, this production does not establish a specific literary genre due to its scattered nature, as many novelists attribute such ramblings to the narrator's dreams or madness. Nonetheless, it has yet to establish itself.[7]

 
Jules Verne's novels popularized tales of scientific imagination.

This literature underwent a crucial shift with the release of Jules Verne's scientific novels, which played a key role in popularizing a new literary genre. As one of the pioneers of science fiction, Verne's impact on stories rooted in scientific imagination is profound - so much so that it eclipsed a whole emerging literary movement that was slowly coalescing around several writers.[8] Nonetheless, during the rise of Vernian stories, the "scientific marvel" genre emerged cautiously, coinciding with the progress of both sciences and pseudosciences. Likewise, from the 1880s onwards, psychiatric observations occupied a place in popular imagination.[9] Indeed, the studies on hypnosis conducted by Doctors James Braid and Eugène Azam in the 1840s, followed by the research of Doctor Charcot in the latter part of the nineteenth century, revealed the mysteries of every individual, thereby transforming the once perceived supernatural phenomena into a natural occurrence and providing a rational explanation for the remarkable abilities manifested by convulsionaries or those possessed.[10] This scientific community was enriched by notable researchers like Marie and Pierre Curie, Charles Richet, and Camille Flammarion. They systematically investigated unexplained phenomena by focusing on uncovering hidden worlds, long-range communication, and X-ray vision.[11]

By the close of the nineteenth century, public opinion became more sensitive to scientific theories as practices previously regarded as outlandish sought validation as scientific disciplines, including phrenology,[12] hypnotherapy, and fakirism.[13] Technological advancements, such as the discovery of X-rays and endeavors to communicate with Mars, further contributed to this increasing sensitivity. These newly emerging scientific or pseudo-scientific developments have been prominently featured in publications such as Je sais tout and Lectures pour tous. These magazines consecutively published articles that disseminated and speculated about the future of science, accompanied by anticipatory short stories.[14]

The late 19th century witnessed a new generation of writers, such as J.-H. Rosny aîné, utilizing science and pseudoscience for purely fictional purposes.[15] This marked a significant departure from their predecessors, who employed the conjectural element as a pretext, following in the footsteps of Savinian Cyrano de Bergerac's utopian, Jonathan Swift's satires, and Camille Flammarion's astronomical exposés.[16]

Definition edit

The "scientific-marvelous", a literature of the imaginary with vaguely defined boundaries edit

 
Prior to its appropriation by Maurice Renard, the term "scientific marvelous" was mainly used to refer to the work of H.G. Wells.

The term "scientific marvel" was ambiguous before Maurice Renard's seminal manifesto. It had varying meanings.[17] Literary critics coined this neologism in the 19th century to designate all works of fiction relating to science, whether they aimed to merge science and wonder or were generally scientific novels.[18] In 1875, Louis Énault, a journalist, coined the term "scientific marvel" to describe the plot of Victorien Sardou's La Perle noire which utilizes scientific explanations to justify unlikely events.[19] Literary critic Charles Le Goffic associated the term with the scientific novels of Jules Verne in his study Les romanciers aujourd'hui (1890). The term "Wonder" was coined by Joseph-Pierre Durand [fr], a physiologist, in his book "Le Merveilleux scientifique" in 1894 to describe the scientific study of phenomena that were once deemed marvelous.[20]

However, during the early 20th century, literary critics primarily used the term to refer to H. G. Wells' novels. Marcel Réja, a psychiatrist, discussed this usage in his 1904 article published in "Le Mercure de France" titled "H.-G." It is plausible that Maurice Renard initially came across the term "scientific marvel" in H. G. Wells' works. "The Concept of Scientific Marvel in the Writings of Maurice Renard and its Origins in H. G. Wells".[19] Comparing the scientific imagination of Wells and Jules Verne is a recurring theme among critics analyzing the intersection of science and imagination. When Renard published his groundbreaking article, scholars had already been intrigued by this new literary genre for years.[21]

Theorizing a literary genre: the "Renardian scientific-marvelous novel" edit

 
Between 1909 and 1928, writer Maurice Renard set about theorizing the concept of the scientific marvel.

At the turn of the 20th century, the term "scientific marvel" held various connotations until Maurice Renard redefined the phrase in 1909. Follow conventional academic structures including regular author and institution formatting, while using clear, objective language with a passive tone, avoiding personal perspectives and hedging. Additionally, maintain formal register, precise word choice, and grammatical correctness while using consistent citation and avoiding filler words. He outlined his literary agenda in three articles, notably "Du roman merveilleux-scientifique et de son action sur l'intelligence du progrès," which debuted in Le Spectateur during October 1909, and "Le Merveilleux scientifique et La Force mystérieuse de J.-H." Rosny aine was published in La Vie in June 1914 and "Le roman d'hypothese" was published in the magazine ABC in 1928.[nb 1][22] The writer's literary career showcased evolution in not only the definition of the genre but also its name, thereby complicating the understanding of the term "scientific marvel."[23]

The 1909 Manifesto edit

"The scientific-marvelous novel is fiction whose basis is a sophism; whose object is to lead the reader to a contemplation of the universe closer to the truth; whose means is the application of scientific methods to the comprehensive study of the unknown and the uncertain."

— Maurice Renard

In the 19th century, literary critics pondered the future of fantastique stories. Maurice Renard believed that the gradual disappearance of the supernatural due to scientific advances required a renewal of fantasy. Therefore, writers must use science to create and explore new forms of the marvelous in the face of this disenchantment with the world.[24] In 1909, the writer released a manifesto titled "Du roman merveilleux-scientifique et de son action sur l'intelligence du progrès." The manifesto aimed to establish the existence of a novelistic genre with autonomy and literary value within the critical field.[25] In this article, the author establishes compositional rules for rational novelistic conjecture[26] and introduces the concept of "scientific marvel," previously applied to certain works by writers such as H. G. Wells, J.-H. Rosny aîné, and Jules Verne.[27] However, the author does not simply acknowledge the existence of the "scientific marvel" theme but rather strictly defines and elevates it to a distinct literary genre. In his opinion, the change in status justifies a new syntax, specifically, including a hyphen between the two words, which incidentally changes the noun into an adjective.[28]

 
According to Maurice Renard, proponents of the scientific-marvelous genre need to follow the same approach as Robert Louis Stevenson, with his novel The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, published in 1886.

Maurice Renard defines the scientific-marvelous novel as a literary genre in which science is utilized as a disruptive element as opposed to a mere setting. The plot follows a rational framework while a scientific law, be it physical, chemical, psychic or biological, is altered or discovered.[29] Then, the novelist must envision all potential ramifications.[30] Furthermore, Renard implores his colleagues to venture into the unknown realms of science, creating a vertiginous experience for the reader.[31] Defined as a "scholarly structured story", the scientific-marvelous novel aims to encourage readers to question themselves and view the world from a different perspective.[29] Inspired by the naturalist novel of Émile Zola, it serves as a laboratory of ideas, observing how the environment affects the characters.[29] Furthermore, since the legitimacy of the genre stems from its philosophical scope, Maurice Renard chose to publish his article in Le Spectateur - a critical and philosophical journal - instead of a literary review.[32]

Renard aimed to establish a literary movement around the genre through his manifesto. He first establishes himself in a genre that is well known to critics by claiming renowned fantasy authors. First and foremost, this work honors Edgar Poe for his establishment of the scientific-marvelous novel at its purest level,[nb 2] and then H. G. Wells for expanding the genre through the profusion of his works. Along with the two genre founders, Maurice Renard lists Auguste de Villiers de L'Isle-Adam, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Charles Derennes as the creators of this new genre, through their respective works The Future Eve (1886), Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886), and Le Peuple du Pôle [fr] (1907).[33]

 
Maurice Renard's 1909 manifesto was republished as a preface to The Blue Peril in 1911, ensuring its posterity.

Maurice Renard defines the scientific-marvelous novel in opposition to specific works from which he chooses to distance himself. He categorically rejects Jules Verne, accused of contributing to pigeonholing the scientific novel as literature for young people, a publishing sector far removed from the intellectual demands Renard aimed to meet.[34] Moreover, Verne is also accused of either popularizing science or extrapolating from reality, while Renard sought to break with reality.[35] Indeed, Jules Verne's focus on writing scientifically plausible novels sets him apart from Renard's theory of imagining science in unknown territories.[36] Verne also refrains from endorsing the educational adventure stories of André Laurie and Paul d'Ivoi [fr],[29] or Albert Robida's humorous anticipations that hold a satirical purpose.[37] The purpose of the scientific-marvelous story differs from that of anticipation. While anticipation is satisfied with placing the storyline in the future, scientific-marvelous novels envision the outcomes of modern or future innovations.[38] Maurice Renard constructs his plots through the same intellectual means commonly applied in scientific activities,[39] yet they remain rooted in an imaginative, fictional science.[40]

The manifesto made a significant impact.[41] After its initial release, critics Edmond Pilon and Henry Durand-Davray [fr] reaffirmed Renard's article, though it was predominantly its reissue two years later as a preface to The Blue Peril that secured its longevity. In 1915, Hubert Matthey published Essai sur le merveilleux dans la littérature française depuis 1800, wherein he frequently alluded to the 1909 manifesto. The term was discussed by critics until 1940, whether in an obituary of Rosny aîné or in the writings of representatives of the genre and its defenders, including Gaston de Pawlowski and André Maurois.[42] During the 1910s and 1920s, two opposing factions emerged. On one hand, there were the advocates of the scientific-marvelous novel, who were actually a small group of Maurice Renard's acquaintances. Charles Derennes, Jean Ray, Rosny aîné,[43] Albert Dubeux [fr], and Georges de la Fouchardière lavished praise on the writer.[44] However, critics were generally either disinterested or harsh, viewing the genre as populist literature or "childish entertainment." This is exemplified by Jacques Copeau's scathing attack in a 1912 article published in La Nouvelle Revue Française.[41]

Evolution of the term: from the "scientific-marvelous novel" to the "novel of hypothesis" edit

The term "roman merveilleux-scientifique" was developed by Maurice Renard between 1909 and 1928 to earn acknowledgment and prevent the extinction of the genre. The predicament persisted in differentiating the novel from Jules Verne, whose literary style still eclipsed all scientific imaginative literature.[45] Gradually, the lack of success in establishing a literary movement was evident in the author's frustrated tone, especially in the 1923 article "Since Sinbad". However, his comments' sharpness was diminished in "Le roman d'hypothèse," a disillusioned text in which he seemed to have abandoned his literary objectives. After 1928, he refrained from publishing critical articles, and his literary output in this category was minimal: Le Maître de la lumière [fr] (1933) and the narrative L'an 2000 (1938).[46]

 
In 1914, Maurice Renard added J.-H. Rosny aîné to the list of writers of scientific-marvelous novels with the release of La Force mystérieuse [fr].

In 1914, Maurice Renard reviewed Rosny aîné's La Force mystérieuse [fr] and used it as an opportunity to develop his own concepts on the scientific-marvelous novel. He published this work under his name. The theorist changed his pen name to counter criticism of the genre, which accused it of relying too heavily on fantasy at the expense of scientific rigor. As early as 1908, the writer used the term "conte à structure savante" to refer to these literary goals.[47] However, in 1923's "Depuis Sinbad", they rejected "merveilleux-scientifique" in favor of "parascientifique" to better reflect scientific mysteries.[48] Five years later, the writer's eponymous article "The Novel of Hypothesis" renamed the genre once again, emphasizing its epistemological value. With his new expression, Renard aimed to demonstrate that exploring the unknown could offer fresh insights into reality.[49] However, the impact of these lexical changes was restricted, since the phrase "roman merveilleux-scientifique" had already established itself[nb 3][50] - even if literary critics frequently employed it in a different way to Renard's definition.[51]

Alongside the onomastic adjustment, Maurice Renard also revised the list of writers within the genre. In 1914, Rosny aine joined the ranking, and Charles Derennes, who had not produced anything since Le Peuple du Pôle [fr], was removed.[52] Once scientific marvels were recognized as a separate genre by critics, it became unnecessary for theorists to defend their purity by excluding authors who introduced sociological or satirical aspects. As the articles progress, Renard demonstrates greater flexibility regarding the use of scientific marvels, recognizing that the genre can serve as a means to an end beyond its own aesthetic purpose. The novelist skillfully interweaves other generic codes, such as through the incorporation of detective plots in "The Blue Peril" (1911) and satire in "Un homme chez les microbes [fr]" (1928).[53]

Throughout his career, Maurice Renard endeavored to perpetuate the scientific-marvelous genre even if it required an easing of its theoretical constraints. For a decade, he established the Maurice Renard prize for a novel of scientific imagination with the objective of legitimizing the genre. From 1922 to 1932, the prize was awarded to ten authors, including Marcel Roland and Alexandre Arnoux. However, their works primarily focused on anticipation and utopia, rendering the nominations a testament to the relaxation of the 1909 manifesto.[nb 4][54]

Popular literature edit

The scientific-marvelous genre emerged in France at the end of the 19th century and thrived until the 1930s, gradually declining in the 1950s. While Maurice Renard's articles were influential, scientific-marvelous novels are still considered popular literature due to the themes they explore and their publication media.

A generation of writers in love with scientific conjecture edit

 
Guy de Maupassant's The Horla is a scientific-marvelous tale before its time.

With his short story "The Horla," Guy de Maupassant published a text ahead of its time that blended the fantastic and scientific approaches. The author narrates the loss of bearings experienced by an individual suffering from the presence of an invisible being in their environment.[55] This 1886 story significantly influenced authors of the scientific-marvelous movement, incorporating science, pseudo-science, and spiritualism.[56]

 
In La Force mystérieuse [fr], Rosny aîné depicts an immense cataclysm that overturns the entire human race.

Nevertheless, the scientific marvel genre appeared to thrive in 1887, when Rosny aîné published the short novel Les Xipéhuz, which details an encounter between humans and a non-organic intelligence from distant prehistory.[57] Prior to this, scientific marvelous stories had been published unobtrusively. However, this distinctive text achieved great literary success, increasing publicity for the genre. A versatile author, Rosny aîné created non-anthropocentric narratives where humans are depicted as a modest part of a larger cosmic entity, rather than as an end in themselves.[58] Specifically, his work follows an extensive "war of the kingdoms," from the triumphant emergence of our species in prehistoric times to the eventual replacement of Homo sapiens by another life form that dominates the Earth's surface in the distant future.[59] Thus, in Les Xipéhuz, Rosny aîné presents a confrontation between primitive humanity and an unfamiliar race, and in La Force mystérieuse [fr] (1913), he envisions a modern cataclysm that intensifies, compelling humankind to implement social reorganization. The author achieved massive commercial success with these novels, placing him at the forefront of the scientific-marvelous movement among his peers and critics to this day.[60]

Selected to join the youthful Goncourt literary society together with his brother J.-H. Rosny jeune, he was among the individuals who granted the primary Prix Goncourt to a novel of the scientific-marvelous: Force ennemie by Franco-American writer John-Antoine Nau, which was published in 1903. The novel centers on the subject of space travel through mental projection, in which an extraterrestrial lodges in the narrator's mind while exploring a potential invasion.[61] Two years later, the Prix Goncourt was awarded to Les Civilisés [fr], a speculative novel by Claude Farrère that envisions a future conflict between France and Great Britain.[62]

Around the same time, the literary works of H. G. Wells also gained popularity, with regular reviews in the French press. Under the inspiration of several French authors, the genre acquired credibility in literature concurrently with Maurice Renard's theorization of it as the scientific-marvelous genre. For the writer, this pursuit of credibility was a genuine challenge, given that it was a genre he authored himself.[63] His numerous novels embrace popular[56] scientific imagination themes, beginning with a fundamental premise that he exhaustively explores. For instance, the author presents extreme human transplants in Le Docteur Lerne, sous-dieu, an invisible community coexisting with humanity in The Blue Peril, a man possessing enhanced vision in L'Homme truqué, and a machine able to replicate objects and bodies in Le Singe.[64]

In the realm of Wells' literature, Rosny aîné and Maurice Renard emerge as the pioneers of an up-and-coming literary genre despite not being widely recognized by the public.[65] Nevertheless, the genre distinguishes itself by providing readers with sensational and extraordinary experiences, limited only by the author's imagination. These experiences include scenarios such as the Eiffel Tower theft, various invasions, and even apocalyptic endings.[66]

In 1908, Jean de La Hire released La Roue fulgurante [fr]. The novel tells the story of a group of earthlings who are abducted by a spaceship and transported to Mercury and Venus. This widely popular work solidified La Hire's position as a prominent figure in pre-war French science fiction.[67] Converted to profitable popular literature, he further explored the realm of marvelous science with his successful series featuring the adventures of Léo Saint-Clair le Nyctalope. Additionally, he delved into children's literature with Les Trois Boy-scouts and Les Grandes aventures d'un boy-scout.[68]

 
Best known for the adventures of gentleman burglar Arsène Lupin, Maurice Leblanc also tried his hand at the scientific-marvelous with Les Trois Yeux [fr].

Popular enthusiasm for new scientific and pseudo-scientific theories was embraced by authors and subsequently translated into adventure novels. Objective evaluations of theories were prioritized in these works. Non-scientist writers of scientific-marvelous tales, such as doctors André Couvreur and Octave Béliard [fr], drew inspiration from popular science magazines.[11] At the close of the 19th century, Percival Lowell, an American businessman and amateur astronomer, fervently argued for the presence of canals on Mars. This idea of a Martian civilization captivated French novelists, further popularizing Lowell's theories.[69] Despite not believing in the existence of such canals, French astronomer Camille Flammarion shared in the belief that life existed on Mars. In 1889, the novel Uranie was published, which describes the journey of an astronomer through the stars, with Mars as one of the stages.[70]

 
Cover of Le Petit Journal comparing the appearance of surgeons to that of "mysterious alchemists" (April 27, 1924).

By the end of the 19th century, scientific progress was predominantly viewed as advantageous. However, with subsequent conflicts and wars, this perspective shifted, and the association between scientific advancements and humanity's destructive tendencies became prevalent. Driven by this shift, the figure of the Machiavellian scientist,[71] such as Gustave Le Rouge's Le Mystérieux Docteur Cornélius [fr] (1912-1913), gained popularity. The practitioner is a leader of an underground criminal organization who conducts "carnoplasty" experiments, meaning the modification of human bodies,[72] under the influence of Alexis Carrel's pioneering research on organ transplantation.[73] The outbreak of World War I marked a significant turning point in the innovation of scientific breakthroughs.[74] While writers in the United States, a country relatively spared from the horrors of war, continued to explore science as progress for mankind,[75] European - and particularly French - disillusionment with beneficent science significantly darkened the genre's themes, ultimately becoming essentially pessimistic.[76] Furthermore, during the post-war era, writers of science fiction seemed to have lost their connection to technological advancements (such as astronautical testing, research into nuclear physics, and quantum mechanics) despite their previous close following of scientific research. Instead, they relied on nostalgic themes such as the end of the world, lost worlds, and evil mad scientists to construct their plots.[77]

Contemporary critics generally consider scientific marvels a minor genre with vague and imprecise forms. However, this literature has influenced the evolution of the popular genre,[78] encouraging major authors such as Maurice Leblanc, Guy de Téramond, Gaston Leroux, Octave Béliard [fr], Léon Groc [fr], Gustave Le Rouge, and Jacques Spitz[29] to indulge in it. Indeed, this literature is widely accepted within the official culture, provided that its authors also belong to literary circles. Their works are presented as thematic variations of traditional genres, such as utopia or the philosophical tale, and reviewed by the same literary critics as conventional literature.[79] For instance, Maurice Leblanc recounts in Les Trois Yeux [fr] (1919) the experience of a scientist who develops a B-ray-treated coating allowing past images to appear on a wall, as during a cinematograph session.[80] Similarly, in La Poupée sanglante [fr] (1923), Gaston Leroux incorporates the themes of automata, human transplants, and vampirism within a scientific framework.[81]

The favourite themes of the scientific-marvelous edit

 
In the early 20th century, science made it possible to dramatically increase the size of microbes. Professeur Tornada [fr], a mad scientist in his own right, literally carries out the experiment.[82] Cover of André Couvreur [fr]'s novel Une Invasion de macrobes [fr], published in 1910 by Éditions Pierre Lafitte.

The scientific-marvelous genre, as defined by Maurice Renard, takes as its starting point an alteration of a scientific law, whose consequences the author must imagine. The proponents of this genre are interested not only in pseudosciences considered as deception, such as levitation, metagnomy, metempsychosis, and telepathy, but also in future discoveries such as time travel, miniaturization of beings, and carnoplasty.[83] That is why researchers and engineers, who initiate discoveries and the consequent adventures, are the preferred characters in captivating scientific novels.

 
In 1913, Guy de Téramond imagines a man with X-ray vision after a minor operation. Cover of L'Homme qui voit à travers les murailles [fr] drawn by Henri Armengol [fr].

Biological laws are a subject of modification for researchers. This renders the human body as a malleable substance for well-intentioned or not so well-intentioned scientists to work with. The themes of invisibility, mutation, immortality,[84] and the superman were common in Jean de La Hire's nineteen novels about the Nyctalope's adventures. The Nyctalope is a man with augmented vision and an artificial heart, while the Hictaner is a man hybridized with a shark in L'Homme qui peut vivre dans l'eau [fr] (1910). Louis Boussenard took inspiration from H. G. Wells' The Invisible Man to write Monsieur... Rien! [fr] (1907), a nihilist steals the chemical process that allows him to become invisible in order to assassinate Russian dignitaries.[85]

Authors of scientific marvels systematically seek analogies between scientific phenomena, exploring new facets of augmented humanity. For instance, Maurice Renard's L'Homme au corps subtil [fr] (1913) depicts the ability of Professor Bouvancourt to traverse matter using the penetrating power of X-rays on the human body, echoing François Dutilleul's capabilities from Marcel Aymé's Le Passe-Muraille (1941). In "Un homme chez les microbes" (1928), Renard utilizes the character of a talented scientist to depict the journey of Fléchambeau, who can shrink himself to meet the atomic people. Conversely, in "Une invasion de macrobes [fr]" (1909),[83] André Couvreur portrays the opposite process, where the malevolent scientist Tornada causes a tremendous increase in microbe size.[86] In 1912, Paul Arosa presented Les Mystérieuses Études du professeur Kruhl, which featured a German scientist who succeeded in sustaining the head of a guillotined man, similar to the magic performances of Georges Méliès and music-hall shows that exhibited living severed heads. The same year saw the publication of L'Homme à deux têtes by F.C. Rosensteel, which similarly explored this macabre theme. Henri-Georges Jeanne [fr]'s[87] L'Homme qui devint gorille [fr] in 1921,[nb 5] on the other hand, involved Professor Fringue transplanting an individual's brain into the skull of a gorilla. In Trois Ombres sur Paris [fr] (1929),[nb 6] a researcher formulates a method to create superhumans for the purpose of equalizing all men.[88] Les Petits Hommes de la pinède [fr] (1927) by Octave Béliard provides another instance of biological laws being manipulated, when a scientist creates a population of 30 cm-tall individuals with accelerated growth that eventually surpasses the scientist's control.[89] Finally, Louis Forest's On Vole des Enfants à Paris (1906) and Guy de Téramond's L'Homme qui Peut Tout (1910) explore the possibility of transforming the minds of children and criminals to enhance their cognitive abilities, while Raoul Bigot [fr] depicts in Nounlegos (1919) a phrenologist scientist who developed a device for reading the human brain, without resorting to brain modification.[90]

 
Propelled to his cost on the planet Mars, Robert Darvel encounters a Martian bat in Le Prisonnier de la planète Mars [fr] in 1908.

The popularization of pseudoscientific theories inspired fiction writers to explore the psychic realm. Gustave Le Rouge, in his two-part work Le Prisonnier de la planète Mars [fr] (1908) and La Guerre des vampires [fr] (1909), envisions an interstellar journey accomplished through the collective psychic energy of thousands of yogis who successfully propel protagonist engineer Robert Dravel to Mars.[91] In L' me du docteur Kips (1912), Maurice Champagne portrays metempsychosis through a fakir who aids in the reincarnation of the hero in India.[92] Joseph Jacquin and Aristide Fabre investigate the anabiosis abilities of fakirs in Le sommeil sous les blés (1927)[93] while scientists artificially generate life by theft of psychic energy in Ville hantée (1911-1912) by Léon Groc[94] and Le Voleur de cerveaux (1920) by Jean de Quirielle [fr].[95] Finally, authors in the scientific genre emphasize the risks of using telepathy and mind control, exemplified in André Couvreur and Michel Corday's Le Lynx (1911). The novel chronicles the adventures of a person who gains the ability to read minds by consuming a drug.[96] Similarly, in Lucifer (novel) [fr], Jean de La Hire depicts Baron Glô van Warteck, a villainous mastermind who has created a tool that boosts his psychic abilities. He employs this device to enslave his adversaries and prey worldwide.[14]

 
Cover of the novel On a volé la tour Eiffel (1923) by Léon Groc [fr], illustrated by Henri Armengol [fr].

Alteration and speculation of physical or chemical laws are common techniques used by authors in the science fiction genre. In On a volé la tour Eiffel (1921), Léon Groc explores alchemy through the character of Gourdon, who develops a method for converting iron into gold.[97] Other writers utilize substances like radium to generate scientific fantasies in their plots.[98] In Les idées de Monsieur Triggs (1936),[nb 7]Jean Ray presents a stone with properties akin to radium to Harry Dickson, his valiant private detective. The stone cures skin diseases and causes explosions, thus serving as a unique and powerful tool.[99] Similarly, Albert Bailly [fr] features a transparent spaceship made of ether in L'Éther Alpha [fr] (1929),[nb 8] a novel that received the Prix Jules-Verne award in the same year, showcasing his imaginative writing skills.[14] Additionally, authors in the scientific fiction genre speculate about the discovery of rays possessing multiple properties. For instance, in Aigle et colombe, novelist René d'Anjou portrays the alchemist Fédor Romalewski developing various inventions based on scientific discoveries, including super-radium, X-rays, and Z-rays.[100] The vanishing of certain materials is a recurring motif in conjectural literature,[101] exemplified by the loss of metal in Gaston de Pawlowski's[102] Les Ferropucerons (1912)[nb 9] and Serge-Simon Held's[103] La Mort du fer (1931). Additionally, scientific innovations played a significant role in this imaginative literature. With his series of novels, Le Nyctalope, Jean de La Hire portrays advanced technology in vivid detail, featuring aircraft that can hover, electric submarines, rockets propelled by Hertzian waves, and highly advanced weaponry.[104]

 
In 1924, José Moselli [fr] recounts the encounter between two polar explorers and a stranded Mercury inhabitant in Antarctica, in Le Messager de la planète [fr].

Intimately connected to adventure novels due to their association with the extraordinary, conjectural novels give significant emphasis to travel,[105] whether it be on unexplored territories of Earth, other planets, or even through time with the exploration of unknown life forms. - J.H. Rosny aîné extensively examined these topics in Les Navigateurs de l'infini (1925) and its sequel Les Astronautes [fr] (1960), along with the terrestrial realms uncovered in Les Profondeurs de Kyamo [fr] (1891) and Nymphée [fr] (1893, co-written with his brother J.-H. Rosny jeune). These works follow the protagonist, an explorer journeying through uncharted territories, as he discovers alternate civilizations. The solar system is a popular subject for novelists to describe the possibility of inhabited planets.[106] Some famous examples include Mercury in Jean de La Hire's La Roue fulgurante (1908) and José Moselli's Le Messager de la planète (1924), Venusians in Maurice Leblanc's Les Trois Yeux (1920), and Martians in various novels about the Red Planet, such as Arnould Galopin's Docteur Oméga and Henri Gayar's Aventures merveilleuses de Serge Myrandhal (1908). Some famous examples include Mercury in Jean de La Hire's La La Roue fulgurante [fr] (1908) and José Moselli's Le Messager de la planète [fr] (1924), Venusians in Maurice Leblanc's Les Trois Yeux [fr] (1920), and Martians in various novels about the Red Planet, such as Arnould Galopin's Docteur Oméga and Henri Gayar's[107] Les Robinsons de la planète Mars [fr] (1908). In addition to life forms discovered on lost or neighboring planets, this literature exposes the existence of races that surround us without our awareness. One example of such a race is the Sarvants, an intelligent arachnoid species that evolves in the stratosphere. Maurice Renard details this discovery in The Blue Peril (1911).[108] Similarly, in Rosny aîné's short story Un autre monde (nouvelle) [fr] (1895), the narrator Gueldrois employs his augmented vision to detect invisible geometric life forms prevalent in our surroundings.[109] Finally, the concept of time travel, with or without the aid of a machine, is widely explored by scientific fiction writers. In his novel L'Horloge des siècles [fr] (1902), Albert Robida describes a scenario where after an unknown cataclysm, the Earth reverses its rotation, causing time to flow backwards.[110] In the satirical novel "La Belle Valence [fr]" (1923), André Blandin and Théo Varlet describe the exploits of Poilus who, having come across The Time Machine described by H. G. Wells, accidentally transport their entire infantry troop to 14th-century Valencia, in the midst of a medieval war between the Spanish and Arab armies.[111]

 
In La vie électrique, published in 1890, Albert Robida depicts with his usual satirical eye the progress of an epidemic, the accidental result of "humanitarian and political" research.

Finally, another favorite theme of this literary genre is anticipation. Anticipation novels enable us to envision the effects of technological advancements on daily life, both in the near and distant future, or to envision a future world, whether utopian or dystopian. For instance, in 1910-1911, illustrator Henri Lanos and Jules Perrin co-authored Un monde sur le monde, a speculative fiction in an ambiguous future where a billionaire faces an uprising triggered by the erection of a towering city of 1,900 meters. Léon de Tinseau's Le Duc Rollon [fr] (1912-1913) portrays a post-apocalyptic world in the year 2000, plunged into savagery after a global warfare. Ben Jackson's[nb 10] novel, L' ge Alpha ou la marche du temps (1942), takes place in a city of the 21st century characterized by high levels of inequality and widespread use of atomic energy.[112]

 
"Destruction of the Earth by the impact of a comet", illustration by Henri Lanos [fr] for Camille Flammarion's Omega: The Last Days of the World

The theme of anticipated future conflict recurs throughout Albert Robida's works, beginning with War in the 20th Century (1887),[66] and continuing in his columns for La Caricature and his compositions for La Guerre infernale (1908), a novel by Pierre Giffard written during a time of heightened war tension. Robida's illustrations vividly portray the deadly and innovative nature of the impending war, featuring armored cars, asphyxiating gas and gas masks, gigantic shells, and lookout posts against aerial bombardment. These depictions do not exhibit any nationalistic sentiment. Examples include Captain Danrit's[113] tetralogy La Guerre de demain [fr] (1888-1896) and Albert Bonneau's series Les Samouraïs du Soleil pourpre [fr] (1928-1931).[66] Finally, anticipation can be portrayed as an apocalyptic narrative, like the cataclysm in La Force mystérieuse [fr] (1913) by J.-H. Rosny aîné. Following an unknown cosmic disturbance, the luminous spectrum induces a temporary crisis of madness in all living beings, resulting in the decimation of a significant portion of humanity.[114] This topic is also examined by astronomer Camille Flammarion in the 1893 work Omega: The Last Days of the World. This text is both an anticipatory novel and a scientific essay discussing potential ways for the planet Earth to come to an end.[115]

Publication media that encourage a popular audience edit

 
Journal des voyages [fr] magazine offers a mix of exploration stories and scientific adventure serials.

Maurice Renard encouraged his colleagues to embrace and promote the use of science fiction.[27] Although the genre's theories were initially read by the Parisian literary elite of the early 20th century,[116] proponents of the genre were primarily popular novelists who published their works in large-circulation periodicals and publishing houses geared towards workers. To captivate their readers, writers crafted exciting tales with archetypal heroes and applied these storylines to scientific marvels, as well as popular genres like sentimental literature, historical adventure stories, and detective tales.[35] However, detractors soon labeled the works promoted by Renard as a sub-genre due to their formulaic nature.[117]

By the close of the 19th century, various scientific journals published scientific adventure tales alongside popularization articles.[118] The Journal des voyages [fr], established by Charles-Lucien Huard [fr], and Sciences et Voyages [fr] magazine, founded by the Offenstadt brothers [fr], published serialized works in the field of marvelous science in addition to travel accounts. Meanwhile, La Science illustrée [fr] by Louis Figuier featured popular science articles alongside novels by authors Louis Boussenard and Count Didier de Chousy [fr]. General interest magazines also published a variety of serialized novels, including Lectures pour tous, which contained short stories from various authors such as Octave Béliard, Maurice Renard, Raoul Bigot, Noëlle Roger, and J.-H. Rosny aîné. Rosny aîné. Additionally, the magazines operated by Pierre Lafitte - the daily Excelsior journal [fr] and monthly Je sais tout - featured works by Guy de Téramond, Léon Groc, André Couvreur, Michel Corday, and additional short stories by Maurice Renard and J.-H. Rosny aîné, Maurice Leblanc, Michel Corday, Paul Arosa, and Jules Perrin were notable authors of speculative fiction in early 20th-century France. Additionally, certain daily newspapers, including L'Intransigeant, which featured multiple novels by Maurice Renard and Léon Groc, and Le Matin, which published works by Maurice Renard, Jean de La Hire, and Gaston Leroux,[14] provided their readers with sci-fi and fantasy novels. Some other publications, such as L'Assiette au beurre and Le Miroir du Monde, utilized special issues to publish occasional scientific-marvelous stories.[119]

 
An Italian painter, Gino Starace [fr] worked with a number of publishing houses to illustrate popular literature, including some scientific-marvelous novels such as André Delcamp's L'Homme au masque de chair, published in 1935 in the "Le Livre populaire" collection by Fayard.

Several successful publishing houses, frequently producing large print runs, are also engaged in distributing novels related to scientific marvelouss. However, no particular compilation explicitly categorizes itself as a representative of this genre. Four publishers, namely Albert Méricant, Jules Tallandier [fr], Joseph Ferenczi [fr], and Pierre Lafitte, are notable for their consistent catalogs. Editions Albert Mericant [fr] published multiple works by Gustave Le Rouge and Paul d'Ivoi in the "Le Roman d'Aventures" series (1908-1909). Additionally, works by Leon Groc, Jules Hoche, and Jean de Quirielle were published in the "Les Recits Mysterieux" collection (1912-1914). Editions Tallandier regularly had covers illustrated by Maurice Toussaint [fr]. They offered two collections, the "Bibliothèque des Grandes Aventures" (1927-1930), featuring authors such as Henri Gayar [fr], Norbert Sevestre [fr], Paul d'Ivoi, Louis Boussenard, and René Thévenin. This was followed by Le Lynx (literary collection) [fr] (1939-1941), with reprints by H. J. Magog, André Couvreur, and Léon Groc. In addition to his periodicals, Pierre Lafitte published science fiction novels through his publishing house (Editions Pierre Lafitte) [fr]. These novels were notably featured in the "Idéal-Bibliothèque" collection, which included works by Clément Vautel and Maurice Renard, as well as in the "Point d'interrogation" detective collection, which featured some speculative works by Maurice Leblanc. Ferenczi & Sons contributed to the distribution of scientific-marvelous novels through several collections. Many of the covers were illustrated by Henri Armengol. Some of the collections include "The Great Novels", "Trips and Adventures", "The Adventure Book", "The Small Adventure Novel", "The Secret Police Files," and "The Novels of Guy de Téramond," a collection dedicated to this particular author.[14] Smaller publishers participated in this movement as well, including Editions La Fenêtre ouverte, where writer and translator Régis Messac debuted the "Les Hypermondes [fr]" collection in 1935. This series focused on scientific tales[nb 11] but was terminated prematurely by World War II.[120]

Concurrently, science fiction literature was expanding abroad. Several novels in the scientific imagination genre were translated and published in Italy, Great Britain, the Czech Republic, Russia, and Spain a few months after their release in France. Notably, Il Romanzo Mensile, an Italian magazine, published 26 tales of scientific imagination between 1908 and 1933. Some of the most famous stories by authors such as Maurice Renard (L'Homme truqué), Guy de Téramond (L'Homme qui voit à travers les murailles [fr]),[14] and Gaston Leroux (Le Fauteuil hanté [fr]) were included. The Transalpine Monthly, published by the daily Corriere della Sera, showcases a diverse collection of intriguing and imaginative tales from renowned fiction writers across various nations. French novelists of scientific marvelous coexist alongside acclaimed authors including Scotland's Conan Doyle, England's Henry Rider Haggard, Ireland's Sheridan Le Fanu, and Australia's Carlton Dawe.[121]

Other media for the scientific-marvelous edit

 
The towers of Notre-Dame de Paris cathedral house the central aircraft station in Albert Robida's Le Vingtième Siècle (1883).

Enchanting science through illustrations edit

Illustrators played a significant role in the development of scientific marvelous due to their graphic imagination.[122] The first generation of illustrators ventured to utilize innovative imagery, satire, and caricature in the French press.[119] Albert Robida typifies this group of cartoonists with his comical exploits, like Saturnin Farandoul's Voyages très extraordinaires (1879), which parodies Jules Verne's Voyages extraordinaires.[123] Gradually, the illustrations became less exaggerated as artists developed their own unique style. Experimentation occurred on the covers of both magazines and novels, as well as within the pages of speculative fictional accounts.[119] However, publishers maintained closer control over novel cover designs, limiting artistic freedom.[124] In fact, illustrators prioritized technological fantasy over scientific accuracy, resulting in a visual rather than scientific approach. Consequently, scenes frequently portray individuals attired in three-piece suits and top hats, mingling with futuristic apparatuses like "telephonoscopes" and aerial railroads.[125]

 
La chasse aux microbes, color lithograph by Jean-Marc Côté for the En l'an 2000 (1910) series of futuristic postcards.

Moreover, illustrators are tasked with illustrating the writings of novelists who extrapolate scientific inventions and those of scientists who aim to popularize scientific knowledge,[126] resulting in a combination of genres and a reciprocal exchange between the fantastical and the scientific. To convey scientific imagery, often consisting of unrealistic visuals, illustrators must employ their imagination to make it understandable to the reader. For instance, when viewed under a microscope, microbes may resemble snakes or amphibians.[127] Illustration is crucial in developing a scientific-marvelous imaginary by continuously blending visual elements between the two components. This is achieved through various means, including the evoked theme, the alternating of incredible stories and scientific articles, or the use of photomontage. The use of the technique that combines photographs and painted inserts, which was frequently utilized in Je sais tout magazine, serves to accentuate the connection between wonder and science.[128]

Alongside magazine interior illustrations and novel covers, numerous other media aided in the proliferation of this scientific-marvelous imagery. For instance, in the 1950s, the chocolatier Cantaloup-Catala published a collection of postcards and collectible images[129] titled "Anticipation... life in the year 2000" to idealize the future means of transportation.[130]

 
"Une sortie de bal", illustration by Henri Lanos in Je sais tout, February 1905.

The depiction of the futuristic city is a recurring theme in the graphic art of the marvelous scientist. Its significance goes beyond just being a mere setting; it symbolizes the society of the future[131] and provides a pretext for showcasing a favorite illustration theme - the juxtaposition of man and his monumental surroundings.[132] Airborne vehicles dancing against a backdrop of disproportionate architecture is a common feature of this imagery. The planes disembark a constant flow of travelers on the rooftops functioning as flight decks.[124] The scientific-marvelous vision is pervaded by exoticism, which is especially emphasized on the book covers. Regardless of the storyline, the illustrators always include a visual element that announces the adventure in a distant and lesser-known nation. The desire to disorient readers is paired with an effort to stimulate their imagination, exemplified by Georges Conrad's illustrations gracing many covers of the Journal des voyages. Conrad draws inspiration from Parisian libraries. In contrast, space travel tales frequently appear in scientific-marvelous works, but corresponding illustrations are infrequent and noticeably less groundbreaking.[133]

 
After Gino Starace's drawings accompanied L'Homme qui peut vivre dans l'eau [fr] published as a serial in Le Matin in 1909, Henri Armengol designed the cover for the novel published by Ferenczi in 1922.[134]

With the rise of the scientific-marvelous genre, illustrators began to establish their own unique styles. Albert Robida, a prosperous cartoonist and novelist, is an emblematic example. He advocated for progress,[135] but also harbored concerns about its potential excesses. Robida conveyed his imaginative concepts and visionary inventions through a diverse range of media, including posters, lithographs, caricatures, and novels. Through all of these art forms, he primarily sought to highlight humanity's flaws with humor. While Robida was a prolific illustrator of this graphic genre between the end of the 19th century and World War I,[136] several emblematic artists of scientific-marvelous imagery emerged after the war. Among them is Henri Lanos, who began his career in conjectural graphics by illustrating H.G. Wells' novel "The Sleeper Awakes" (1899) and later contributed to many popular science articles. Increasingly popular, the artist developed a unique visual style characterized by frequent use of bird's-eye views depicting chaotic scenes[137] or individuals juxtaposed with massive structures.[127] Notably, Henri Armengol and Maurice Toussaint seamlessly integrated their graphic art with literary works, cementing their legacy as highly productive contributors to this genre. Armengol was the regular illustrator for the Ferenczi publishing house in the 1920s and 1930s, and contributed to the success of the "Les Romans d'aventures" collection with its distinctive green background.[138] Toussaint also illustrated the covers of numerous collections for the Tallandier publishing house, including almost the entire "La Bibliothèque des grandes aventures" collection with its blue-backed covers.

Finally, in popular literature illustration, illustrators such as Gino Starace and Georges Vallée collaborated with numerous publishers,[139] whereas the majority only occasionally entered the field of conjecture. For instance, Albert Guillaume illustrated a special issue of L'Assiette au beurre in 1901 dedicated to space, and Arnould Moreau illustrated Octave Béliard's short story La Journée d'un Parisien au xxie siècle in Lectures pour tous in 1910.[135] From the 1920s onwards, Henri Lanos was succeeded by A. Noël as the illustrator of scientific articles in Je sais tout magazine.[140] Noël's drawings are closer to industrial art and primarily focus on technical aspects, which distinguishes them from the poetic style of his predecessor. This shift in generations exemplifies the overall progression of magazines, which increasingly prioritize technical advancements over the thought experiments promoted by the Renardian scientific-marvelous model.[141]

The scientific-marvelous theater edit

 
Following the example of scientific-marvelous tales, "Les Invisibles" features science and innovation as the tipping point into a marvelous world.
 
Grand-Guignol plays are occasionally rooted in the scientific-marvelous genre.

In October 1884, M. Bauer directed an original presentation at the Théâtre Antoine-Simone Berriau in Paris: "Les Invisibles". The performance showcased microbial life forms using a scientific apparatus that functioned as both a giant microscope and an overhead projector, projecting images on a vast white curtain.[142] The themes explored in the show, such as personification, miniaturization, and the vision of the invisible, were popular in scientific-marvelous literature.[143] The figures are elucidated by Laguerche, an actor dressed in formal attire, who assumes the part of a host and intellectual.[142] Scientific theatre usually seeks to disseminate science via entertainment and popularization. However, "Les Invisibles" sets itself apart as it implicates the onlooker in an active capacity. The observer takes on the persona of a laboratory technician who reveals the actual protagonist of the drama: the microbe.[144] Bauer's show falls under the classification of scientific-marvelous theater.[145]

During this time, educational-scientific theater emphasized different medical disorders. Playwright André de Lorde utilized this inspiration to develop his horror performances centering on perilous mental patients, presented at the Théâtre du Grand-Guignol during the early 20th century and beyond. As the son of a doctor, André de Lorde aimed to enhance the authenticity and impact of his productions. Consequently, he partnered with psychologist Alfred Binet on five occasions to secure scientific validation.[146] Moreover, Lorde staged eerie plays within the scientific-marvelous category and maintained a friendship with Maurice Renard.[147] In "L'Horrible Expérience" (1909), a drama co-written with Binet, Dr. Charrier attempts to revive his deceased daughter, but ultimately succumbs to strangulation by her corpse. This story was likely inspired by one of Henri-Étienne Beaunis's[146] Contes Physiologiques. Furthermore, "Le Laboratoire des Hallucinations" (1916) features a different practitioner conducting medical experiments on his wife's lover as an act of revenge.[147]

Déclin et disparition edit

 
Not without bitterness, Maurice Renard was economically forced to write for a living between the wars.

The advocates of the scientific-marvelous genre have not succeeded in establishing a well-defined category. They did not endeavor to create a periodical or anthology labeled as such, which would not only provide the genre with coherence and unity, but also allow readers to recognize it as such.[14] This deficiency caused the gradual decline of scientific marvel in the 1930s and beyond.[148] Despite some truly original works, the genre failed to rejuvenate itself and its themes appeared to recede. Space travel was restricted to the solar system, and scientific progress was mainly presented as a hazard rather than a social advancement.[35] Additionally, according to writer Daniel Drode [fr], the literary style struggles to rid itself of an academic veneer. The protagonist of such anticipation novels tends to utilize language passed down from a distant, bygone era - our own. Even when arriving at Planet X in System Y, their sentiments are conveyed using verbiage akin to that of Blériot upon disembarking from his aircraft [...] Should they depict the grandeur of Mars, it is as though Napoleon III is extolling the beauty of Biarritz. The mere thought of academician Vaugelas operating "la chronomachine" instills a sense of dread.[149]

Furthermore, authors are producing fewer speculative stories. The most recent novel by J.-H. Rosny aîné, Les Navigateurs de l'infini, was published in 1925.[nb 12] Similarly, Maurice Renard, who was no longer financially comfortable after the war, spaced out his works on the subject in order to concentrate on more commercially successful stories.[35][150] In his article "Depuis Sinbad" (1923), he expressed his disappointment at such economic limitations.

"There's no need to look any further to find out why Wells stopped working along the lines of La Guerre des mondes, and why Rosny aîné so rarely publishes "Xipéhuz" or Force mystérieuse. To make a living by appealing to intelligence, that, yes, would be truly fantastic!"

The two largest popular publishing houses, Ferenczi and Tallandier, make no distinction between scientific-marvelous novels and adventure and travel stories, giving the genre a lower profile.[151]

 
Author of novels of scientific imagination, Octave Béliard won the first Prix Jules-Verne [fr] for La petite fille de Michel Strogoff in 1927, then the Prix Maurice-Renard [fr] for Les Petits Hommes de la pinède [fr] in 1930.
 
Advertisement for the Jules Verne Prize in the magazine Lectures pour Tous [fr], April 1926.

The Prix Maurice-Renard disappeared in 1932 when Serge-Simon Held declined to accept his award, while Hachette Editions established the Prix Jules-Verne in 1927 via the Lectures pour Tous magazine.[152] The prize's promoters aimed to rejuvenate the scientific novel's foundations by placing it under the famous novelist from Nantes's patronage. In fact, using Jules Verne as a literary reference is helpful in avoiding excessive imagination by emphasizing scientific elements over the fantastic.[153] Additionally, employing this French literary figure serves to reinforce the legitimacy of the genre while supporting a marketing campaign to increase sales of the Hetzel collection, which has been owned by Hachette since July 1914.[154]

In 1925, Offenstadt Brothers Publishing House lost their case against Abbé Calippe's classification of Sciences et Voyages as a hazardous magazine for young people.[155][156] The ruling adversely affected not only the magazine but also all imaginative scientific literature during the interwar era, causing it to practice self-censorship.[157] After World War II, the literature in question was censored in France [fr][nb 13] due to concerns about its negative impact on young people and influence on juvenile delinquency. According to writer and essayist Serge Lehman, the "scientific marvel" genre ended in 1953 with B.R. Bruss's L'Apparition des surhommes [fr], the final identifiable novel in the genre.[158]

Parallel to this decline, the French public discovered "science fiction", a literary genre imported from the United States by Raymond Queneau, Michel Pilotin, and Boris Vian.[159] Its promoters presented it as modern literature created by American authors in the 1920s, of which Jules Verne was only a distant ancestor.[160] This genre not only renewed themes of scientific marvelous, but also surpassed the output of pre-war French writers.[161] Faced with changes in the literary landscape, the younger generation of French authors adopted Anglo-Saxon themes and asserted their control over the "science fiction" genre.[35] Writer B.R. Bruss embraced this dominant genre and explored new themes, including space exploration.[162] As a result, the scientific-marvelous genre, considered inferior due to its popular appeal,[163] faded into obscurity while Jules Verne and American authors gained prominence. In collective memory, the latter has overshadowed 50 years of imaginative scientific literature,[14] now known as "literary Atlantis".[29]

Posterity edit

At the start of the 21st century, the genre of science fiction and fantasy has made a resurgence in popularity. This has been due to not only the republishing of numerous stories from previous decades but also the appropriation of its unique aesthetic and iconic characters by new writers who now have access to these public domain creations. However, the growing critical study of this speculative literature accompanies this renewed interest.[164]

A look back at the scientific-marvelous edit

 
Alongside American science fiction short stories, Jean-Jacques Bridenne wrote articles in Fiction magazine in the 1950s devoted to a number of French writers of the scientific imagination.

Critique studies edit

In 1950, Jean-Jacques Bridenne published La Littérature française d'imagination scientifique, sharing pioneering research on novels resulting from late 19th century[165] scientific discoveries and providing insights into the genre. The magazine Fiction also published his articles on several turn-of-the-century writers.[166] Enthusiasts of turn-of-the-century popular literature came together in the mid-1960s to share their collections.[167] They produced fanzines containing book listings and reviews, among which two mimeographed[168] newsletters emerged as prominent among collectors: the publication Désiré (1965-1981)[nb 14], edited by Jean Leclercq, and Le Chasseur d'Illustrés, renamed Le Chercheur des Publications d'autrefois in 1971, (1967-1977) by Marcel Lagneau and George Fronval [fr].[169][170] The newsletters' reputations were well-established. Beyond these circles of science fiction enthusiasts, it was not until the 1970s[nb 15] that science fiction specialists delved into the production of scientific-marvelous works, which subsequently led to publication for general audiences.[29] In 1973, Jacques Sadoul published Histoire de la science-fiction moderne: 1911-1971, which primarily focused on Anglo-Saxon science fiction despite acknowledging the genre's existence in Europe.[171] Pierre Versins' Encyclopedie de l'utopie, des voyages extraordinaires et de la science-fiction [fr] (1972) and Jacques Van Herp's Panorama de la science-fiction (1974) represented the earliest comprehensive research on the genre.[165]

 
Joseph Altairac publishes in 2018, with his colleague Guy Costes, the Rétrofictions, encyclopédie de la conjecture romanesque rationnelle francophone [fr] devoted to French-speaking conjectural literature and imagery.

Since the turn of the millennium, the public's fascination with popular serialized fiction, specifically those featuring scientific marvels, has invigorated scholarly analysis of this genre.[172] In 1999, Serge Lehman published "Les mondes perdus de l'anticipation française" in Le Monde diplomatique, bringing attention to a neglected section of French-language literary heritage. In 2006, he followed up with the publication of the short story collection "Chasseurs de chimères". The text already adheres to all the given principles and consists of a single sentence without any context to expand on. Therefore, the revised text is L' ge d'or de la science-fiction française (The Golden Age of French Science Fiction), in which he undertakes an initial reflection on this literature of scientific imagination. A number of specialized websites, such as Philippe Ethuin's Archeosf and Jean-Luc Boutel's Sur l'autre face du monde, are also part of this rediscovery movement, taking stock of and critiquing these early works.[173] In 2000, Jean-Marc Lofficier released French Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror, and Pulp Fiction, an extensive encyclopedia in English about French-language science fiction.

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, academic literature on scientific imagination is gaining significance, and many studies are being published. Jean-Marc Gouanvic published his thesis on French science fiction in the 20th century (1900-1968) in 1994. Natacha Vas-Deyres [fr] wrote Ces Français qui ont écrit demain in 2012, followed by Daniel Fondanèche's La Littérature d'imagination scientifique in 2013. These various critical studies are supported by publications in recently established magazines focusing on popular literature such as Rocambole, Le Belphégor, Le Visage vert, and the digital magazine Res Futurae,[174] as well as highly specialized ones like Le Téléphonoscope, which concentrates on Albert Robida and his works, and Le Quinzinzinzili, the Messacquian bulletin that examines the literary output of Régis Messac.[175] In 2018, Guy Costes and Joseph Altairac, both science fiction specialists, published Rétrofictions, encyclopédie de la conjecture romanesque rationnelle francophone [fr]. The encyclopedia provides a comprehensive inventory of all French-language conjectural literature and imagery, paying explicit tribute to Pierre Versins' encyclopedia.[176]

In 2019, Fleur Hopkins, an art history doctoral student, is curating an exhibition at the Bibliothèque nationale de France titled "Le merveilleux-scientifique. Une science-fiction à la française". This exhibition provides a sincere acknowledgment to the scientific-marvelous genre and aims to enhance its visibility amongst the general audience.

 
In April 1926, Hugo Gernsback founded Amazing Stories, the first magazine devoted exclusively to science fiction.

A literary genre in its own right edit

While scientific marvel was once referred to as various names[nb 16] for imaginative scientific literature in the early 20th century, by the post-war years it became closely associated with the science fiction genre. During this time period, it was commonly called "proto-science fiction", "ancient science fiction", or "primitive science fiction" as it introduced themes found in modern science fiction that emerged in the United States from the 1920s onwards.[177] This link between scientific advancements - identified as the "golden age of French science fiction" by Serge Lehman - and post-war science fiction is evident through their mutual focus on specific themes such as encounters with extraterrestrial life, creation and integration of artificial or augmented beings, and catastrophic events.[29] Certain scientific-marvelous novels share similar themes and a narratological character that brings them closer to science-fiction narratives. The novels by Rosny aîné, for example, depict a universe unlike our own, forcing readers to reconstruct their frames of reference to follow the story.[178]

However, some researchers challenge the notion that scientific marvel equals "proto-science fiction." Indeed, the interpretation that scientific marvel is merely a genre under construction stems from a teleological viewpoint. However, this interpretation not only erases its own distinct characteristics, but also disregards the fact that it is influenced by various literary traditions, such as the experimental novel, fantasy, and the scientific adventure novel.[179] While discussing scientifiction's[nb 17] definition in Amazing Stories magazine, Hugo Gernsback cites Edgar Allan Poe, Jules Verne, and H.G. Wells as its models but fails to reference any authors of scientific-marvelous novels, denying any connection between the two genres.[180] Despite sharing common ancestors and characteristics, scientific marvel and science fiction exhibit significant differences. For instance, the interwar period's scientific-marvelous novel portrays a pessimistic view of science, different from the essentially optimistic discourse of Anglo-Saxon science fiction.[57]

A century of discontinuous reissues edit

Two significant periods in the republishing of fantastic scientific classics emerged simultaneously with critical works. During the 1960s, a favorable time for French science fiction, the initial massive wave of republications focused on collections of science fiction literature.[181] This resurgence could either be in response to the dominance of Anglo-Saxon science fiction or simply a yearning for a more innocent form of the genre,[182] and although the books were still catered to a niche audience, they were published on a much bigger scale. A second wave of reprints in science fiction literature emerged in the 21st century, with small publishing houses such as L'Arbre vengeur [fr], Bragelonne [fr], Encrage [fr], Les Moutons électriques [fr], and Black Coat Press leading the way. In this regard, Jean-Marc Lofficier publishes in both English and French languages through his American-owned publishing company, Black Coat Press. The French-language collection is known as Rivière Blanche (editorial) [fr].[174]

Genre update edit

 
Cover of René Barjavel's novel Ashes, Ashes, 1943.

From the mid-20th century onward, the scientific-marvelous genre survived only marginally due to the onslaught of American science fiction. René Barjavel and Maurice Limat[183] were instrumental in keeping the genre alive. Barjavel, who claims to be the sole heir of Jules Verne and H. G. Wells, has never used the label 'scientific-marvelous.'[184]

Paradoxically, while French cinema was also abandoning the genre, it found a new home on television after the war in the form of several successful television shows.[185] The tradition of French televisual fantasy, which was developed thanks to technical innovations that allowed for the creation of live-action fakery, reached its peak in the 1960s and 1970s before declining in the mid-1980s.[186] Exploiting the soap opera genre,[187] TV movies rely heavily on adaptations of science-fiction novels, exemplified by La Poupée sanglante [fr] (1976) directed by Marcel Cravenne [fr],[188] La Double Vie de Théophraste Longuet [fr] (1981) by Yannick Andréi,[189] and Le Mystérieux Docteur Cornélius [fr] (1984) by Maurice Frydland [fr].[190] It relies on successful original creations, including the series Aux frontières du possible (1971-1974), which blends elements of a detective series and scientific anticipation,[191] and La Brigade des Maléfices (1971), which combines detective and fantasy genres,[192] as well as the soap opera Les Compagnons de Baal [fr] (1968), which chronicles the esoteric adventures of a journalist controlled by a secret society.[193]

 
In addition to his work as an essayist and anthologist, Serge Lehman has revived characters from scientific-marvelous novels in the comic strip La Brigade chimérique [fr].

If the label "scientific marvel" no longer appears in literature, the foundation of the genre remains intact: the encounter between a human and an extraordinary element, be it an object, a creature, or a physical phenomenon. This principle is handed down to future generations of authors. Authors like René Barjavel (Ashes, Ashes, 1943), Pierre Boulle (Planet of the Apes, 1963), and Robert Merle (Les Hommes protégés [fr], 1974) drew inspiration from this heritage and reinterpreted it. Even more recently, authors like Bernard Werber (Empire of the Ants, 1991-1996) and Michel Houellebecq (Atomised, 1998)[194] have continued to do so. In the second half of the 20th century, nascent French science fiction (SF) claimed to exclusively hail from the genre across the Atlantic. However, it was actually the result of multiple currents, with marvelous sci-fi serving as just one.[195]

In addition to this contemporary science-fiction, which is influenced by both French and Anglo-Saxon traditions, a fully-developed scientific marvel reemerged at the beginning of the 21st century. This genre mainly resurfaced through the medium of comics.[196] It endured informally during the latter half of the 20th century, particularly with Edgar P. Jacobs began with the adventures of Blake and Mortimer in 1946,[197] followed by Jacques Tardi's Le Démon des glaces [fr] in 1974 and the The Extraordinary Adventures of Adèle Blanc-Sec series in 1976, both of which reuse markers of scientific marvelous, such as the resurgence of prehistoric animals. Another Belgian author duo, François Schuiten and Benoît Peeters, published Les Cités obscures from 1983, which reflects the influence of Jules Verne and Albert Robida. Finally, a resurgence of scientific marvel occurred through the release of the comic series La Brigade chimérique [fr] (2009-2010)[198] by authors Serge Lehman and Fabrice Colin. This work serves as both a tribute to classical literature and a modern reinterpretation, presenting numerous European literary superheroes from the early 20th century while also elucidating their disappearance after the events of World War II and the more general concealment of scientific imagination in literary works.[199] Following this series, Serge Lehman updates the genre with three comics - L'Homme truqué (2013), adapting the short story and novel of the same name by Maurice Renard; L'Œil de la Nuit [fr] (2015-2016), featuring the adventures of the Nyctalope; and Masqué [fr] (2012-2013), which showcases a resurgence of scientific marvelous in the near future.[200]

 
Jean-Marc Lofficier and his wife Randy are contributing to the rediscovery of the scientific-marvelous genre with an encyclopedic work, English translations of key works in the genre, and anthologies of short stories and essays published by Black Coat Press.

Among the new generation of authors who resurrect literary heritage, Xavier Dorison [fr] and Enrique Breccia introduce mechanically enhanced super-soldiers during World War I in Les Sentinelles [fr] (2008-2014), Jean-Marc Lofficier and Gil Formosa tackle Jules Verne's character in Robur (comic) [fr] (2003-2005), and Alex Alice delves into the mysteries of the ether in Le Château des étoiles [fr] (since 2014). These authors do not simply set their narratives in the Belle Époque or rely on familiar literary figures. Rather, they resurrect several important themes of the genre, including exploration, war, and fantastical inventions. Some even adopt a periodical format, as in Le Château des Étoiles, which was originally published in fascicles as a nod to the 19th-century feuilleton tradition.[201]

 
In Le Paris des Merveilles [fr], Pierre Pevel imagines the adventures of magician Louis Denizart Hippolyte Griffont in the early 20th century.

Since 2005, Black Coat Press has been publishing the anthology series "Tales of the Shadowmen", in addition to its reprint work. These collections comprise of short stories that narrate the journeys of heroes and villains from popular culture during the 19th and 20th centuries. Furthermore, starting from 2007, the series has been available in French under the title "Les Compagnons de l'Ombre" within the Rivière Blanche collection.[202] Since 2015, the collection has published an anthological series of short stories titled "Dimension merveilleux scientifique." The short stories, written by various authors, intend to revive the French-language literary genre that has lost popularity.[17]

This renewed fascination with scientific advancements appears to be a facet of the wider steampunk trend, an uchronian genre of alternative history literature that emerged during the 1990s, reimagining a past, particularly the 19th century, in which technological progress rapidly advanced and became firmly established.[203] The scientific phenomenon is resurfacing alongside various literary genres, including steampunk and gaslamp fantasy. Prominent authors of these genres include Mathieu Gaborit [fr] and Fabrice Colin with Confessions d'un automate mangeur d'opium [fr] (1999), Pierre Pevel with his Paris des Merveilles [fr] cycle (2003-2015), and Estelle Faye [fr] with Un éclat de givre (2014). These authors are considered to be the most representative proponents of the early 21st century.[204]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Alongside these three main articles, which seek to institutionalize the genre, the writer completes and evolves his thinking with "Two Observations on the Audience. "Mr. Orville Wright..." - Le canard attraction" in Le Spectateur no. 31, January 1912; "Depuis Sinbad" in L'Ami du livre, June 1923; and "Anticipations" in Paris-Soir no. 580, May 1925.
  2. ^ "Edgar Poe, with only two tales, The Truth about the Case of Mr. Valdemar and Recollections of Mr. August Bedloe, founded the pure marvel-scientific novel."
  3. ^ In particular, critic Jean Morel helped establish the term with his article "J.-H. Rosny aîné et le merveilleux scientifique", published in Le Mercure de France in 1926.
  4. ^ After the winner of the 1932 prize, Serge-Simon Held, refused his award so as not to jeopardize his chances of winning the Goncourt, Maurice Renard decided to put an end to the literary prize.
  5. ^ The novel originally appeared in 1911 under the title Le Roman d'un singe.
  6. ^ The novel originally appeared in 1920 under the title Les Surhommes.
  7. ^ The story was published in Harry Dickson's adventures, issue no. 152, entitled Les Sept petites chaises.
  8. ^ The novel first appeared in serial form in the pages of Le Figaro in 1928, under the title Le Baiser de l'infini.
  9. ^ This short story was initially published under the title Au temps des barbares (contes futurs in 1909, before being included under the title "Les Ferropucerons" in Voyage au pays de la quatrième dimension in 1912.
  10. ^ The real author of this novel is Jean-Marie Gerbault, who pretends to be the translator, attributing it to Ben Jackson, an imaginary American author.
  11. ^ While the term "science fiction" was definitively established in the United States in the 1930s, the term "scientific novel" was favored in France at the same time, following the example of "scientific romance" in use in the United Kingdom since the end of the 19th century.
  12. ^ Its sequel, announced the same year, was only published posthumously in 1960 under the title Les Astronautes.
  13. ^ The July 16, 1949 law on publications for young people aims to regulate the distribution of children's books and magazines.
  14. ^ The periodical ceased publication between 1971 and 1974, then reappeared under the title Désiré, l'ami de littérature populaire with a new numbering.
  15. ^ Hosted by Noël Arnaud, Francis Lacassin and Jean Tortel, the pioneering Entretiens sur la paralittérature symposium was held at the Centre culturel international de Cerisy-la-Salle in 1967.
  16. ^ In addition to the term "scientific marvel", the literature of scientific imagination of the early 20th century is also known as "hypothesis novels", "anticipation novels", "chimerical", "extraordinary", etc.
  17. ^ Hugo Gernsback first used and popularized the term "science fiction" in 1929, in an editorial for the magazine Science Wonder Stories.

References edit

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  13. ^ (fr) Hopkins 2018a, p. 244.
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  15. ^ Evans 2018a, § 2.
  16. ^ (fr) Pézard 2018a, § 13.
  17. ^ a b (fr) Hopkins 2018a, p. 241.
  18. ^ (fr) Hopkins 2018a, p. 252.
  19. ^ a b (fr) Hopkins 2018a, p. 253.
  20. ^ (fr) Pézard 2018a, § 37.
  21. ^ (fr) Pézard 2018a, § 2.
  22. ^ (fr) Pézard 2018a, § 1.
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  50. ^ (fr) Hopkins 2018a, p. 255.
  51. ^ (fr) Hopkins 2018b, § 32.
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  81. ^ (fr) Costes and Atairac 2018, p. 1242.
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  84. ^ (fr) Boutel 2015, p. 325.
  85. ^ (fr) Costes and Atairac 2018, p. 336.
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  88. ^ (fr) Costes and Atairac 2018, p. 1302.
  89. ^ (fr) Costes and Atairac 2018, p. 238-239.
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  92. ^ (fr) Costes and Atairac 2018, p. 436.
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  106. ^ (fr) Costes and Atairac 2018, p. 1816-1819.
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  108. ^ (fr) Boutel 2015, p. 323.
  109. ^ (fr) Costes and Atairac 2018, p. 1812.
  110. ^ (fr) Costes and Atairac 2018, p. 1777.
  111. ^ (fr) Costes and Atairac 2018, p. 287.
  112. ^ (fr) Boutel 2015, p. 326.
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  115. ^ (fr) Costes and Atairac 2018, p. 761.
  116. ^ (fr) Evans 2018b, § 7.
  117. ^ (fr) Boutel 2015, p. 300.
  118. ^ (fr) Boutel 2015, p. 315.
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  122. ^ (fr) Boutel 2020, p. 5.
  123. ^ (fr) Boutel 2020, p. 81.
  124. ^ a b (fr) Boutel 2015, p. 335.
  125. ^ (fr) Boutel 2020, p. 15.
  126. ^ (fr) Hopkins 2019d, p. 102.
  127. ^ a b (fr) Hopkins 2019d, p. 103.
  128. ^ (fr) Hopkins 2019d, p. 105-107.
  129. ^ (fr) Boutel 2020, p. 21.
  130. ^ (fr) Boutel 2020, p. 35.
  131. ^ (fr) Boutel 2020, p. 19.
  132. ^ (fr) Hopkins 2019d, p. 104.
  133. ^ (fr) Boutel 2020, p. 49.
  134. ^ (fr) Costes and Atairac 2018, p. 1114.
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  136. ^ (fr) Costes and Atairac 2018, p. 1768.
  137. ^ (fr) Boutel 2020, p. 93-94.
  138. ^ (fr) Boutel 2020, p. 86.
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  158. ^ (fr) Lanuque 2015, p. 372.
  159. ^ (fr) Hummel 2017, p. 3.
  160. ^ (fr) Lehman 2006, p. IV-V.
  161. ^ (fr) Boutel 2015, p. 341-343.
  162. ^ (fr) Bréan 2018, p. 276.
  163. ^ (fr) Lehman 2006, p. XVII.
  164. ^ (fr) Lanuque 2015, p. 376.
  165. ^ a b (fr) Lanuque 2015, p. 376.
  166. ^ (fr) Jean-luc Boutel, "Le merveilleux-scientifique. Une science-fiction à la française" archive, on Sur l'autre face du monde, 2019
  167. ^ (fr) Daniel Couégnas, Introduction à la paralittérature, Paris, Seuil, 1992, 200 p. (ISBN 978-2-02-013555-9), p. 15.
  168. ^ (fr) Sarah Mombert, "Profession: romancier populaire", in Loïc Artiaga (ed.), Le roman populaire: des premiers feuilletons aux adaptations télévisuelles, 1836-1960, Paris, Autrement, coll. "Mémoires : culture" (no. 143), 2008, 186 p. (ISBN 978-2-7467-1200-3), p. 57, n. 7.
  169. ^ (fr) Catherine Frichet, La Collection Bastaire: mémoires de papier (xixe: xxie siècles): Mémoire de Master 2 directed by Ms. Nathalie Ponsard, Université Blaise Pascal - Clermont Université, 2015, 186 p. (read online archive), p. 76.
  170. ^ (fr) Laurent Séguin, Les collections de romans populaires et leur conservation dans les fonds patrimoniaux de la Bibliothèque nationale de France : l'exemple du " Livre populaire " de la Librairie Arthème Fayard. Dissertation under the supervision of Frédéric Barbier, director of the Centre de recherche en histoire du livre de l'ENSSIB, vol. 1, École nationale supérieure des sciences de l'information et des bibliothèques, January 2005, 78 p. (read online archive), p. 12.
  171. ^ (fr) Hummel 2017, p. 4.
  172. ^ (fr) Lanuque 2015, p. 359.
  173. ^ (fr) Lanuque 2015, p. 364.
  174. ^ a b (fr) Lanuque 2015, p. 368.
  175. ^ (fr) Boutel 2015, p. 355.
  176. ^ (fr) Frédérique Roussel, "RétroFictions", tout l'univers d'anticipations francophones", Libération, September 18, 2018 (read online archive).
  177. ^ (fr) Hopkins 2018a, p. 242.
  178. ^ Evans 2018a, § 21.
  179. ^ (fr) Hopkins 2018a, p. 243-244.
  180. ^ (fr) Hummel 2017, p. 16.
  181. ^ (fr) Lanuque 2015, p. 361.
  182. ^ (fr) Lanuque 2015, p. 370.
  183. ^ (fr) Lanuque 2015, p. 360.
  184. ^ (fr) Bréan 2018, p. 275.
  185. ^ (fr) Baudou and Schleret 1995, p. 9.
  186. ^ (fr) Baudou and Schleret 1995, p. 9-10.
  187. ^ (fr) Christian Bosséno, "La télévision française aussi...", CinémAction, Éditions Corlet / Télérama, no. 74 "Le cinéma fantastique", 1st quarter 1995, p. 145 (ISBN 978-2-85480-870-4).
  188. ^ (fr) Baudou and Schleret 1995, p. 117-118.
  189. ^ (fr) Baudou and Schleret 1995, p. 140-141.
  190. ^ (fr) Baudou and Schleret 1995, p. 148-151.
  191. ^ (fr) Baudou and Schleret 1995, p. 85-87.
  192. ^ (fr) Baudou and Schleret 1995, p. 80-84.
  193. ^ (fr) Baudou and Schleret 1995, p. 54-57.
  194. ^ (fr) Bréan 2018, p. 285.
  195. ^ (fr) Boutel 2015, p. 303.
  196. ^ (fr) Lanuque 2018, p. 287.
  197. ^ (fr) Lehman 2006, p. V.
  198. ^ (fr) Lanuque 2018, p. 288-289.
  199. ^ (fr) Xavier Fournier, Super-héros. Une histoire française, Paris, Huginn & Muninn, 2014, 240 p. (ISBN 978-2-36480-127-1), p. 221-222
  200. ^ (fr) Lanuque 2015, p. 366.
  201. ^ (fr) Lanuque 2018, p. 299-300.
  202. ^ (fr) Lanuque 2015, p. 365.
  203. ^ (fr) Lanuque 2015, p. 369.
  204. ^ (fr) Marie-Lucie Bougon, "Cosmogony of French fantasy. Genèse et émancipation", Revue de la BNF, no 59, February 2019, p. 44 (read online archive).

Bibliography edit

Primary sources edit

  • (fr) Maurice Renard, "Du roman merveilleux-scientifique and de son action sur l'intelligence du progrès", Le Spectateur, no 6, october 1909, p. 245-261 (read online archive).
    • Manifesto in which Maurice Renard defines the scientific-marvelous novel.
  • (fr) Maurice Renard, "Le Merveilleux scientifique and La Force mystérieuse de J.-H. Rosny aîné", La Vie, no 16, 15 june 1914, p. 544-548 (read online archive).
    • In this review of Rosny aîné's La Force mystérieuse, Maurice Renard expands on his seminal 1909 article.
  • (fr) Hubert Matthey, Essai sur le merveilleux dans la littérature Française depuis 1800, Paris, Librairie Payot, 1915 (read online archive).
    • A contemporary work in which Hubert Matthey analyzes the scientific-marvelous genre and draws up a chronological table of related works.
  • (fr) Maurice Renard, "Le roman d’hypothèse", A.B.C., no 48, december 1928, p. 345-346 (read online archive).
    • In this article, Maurice Renard renames the term "scientific-marvelous" "novel of hypothesis" to extend the genre's epistemological scope.
  • Serge Lehman, "Les mondes perdus de l'anticipation française", Le Monde diplomatique, july 1999, p. 28-29 (read online archive).
    • A pioneering article in the rediscovery of the scientific-marvelous genre.

Publications edit

  • (fr) Claire Barel-Moisan (dir.) and Jean-François Chassay (dir.), Le roman des possibles: l'anticipation dans l'espace médiatique francophone (1860-1940), Montréal, Presses de l'Université de Montréal, coll. "Cavales", 2019, 483 p. (ISBN 978-2-7606-4017-7).
  • (fr) Jacques Baudou and Jean-Jacques Schleret, Merveilleux, fantastique et science-fiction à la télévision française, Bry-sur-Marne / Paris, INA / Huitième art, coll. "Les dossiers du 8e art", 1995, 183 p. (ISBN 978-2-908905-09-0).
  • (fr) Jean-Luc Boutel, Merveilleux scientifique, Bordeaux, Les Moutons électriques, coll. "Artbooks féeriques", 2020, 96 p. (ISBN 978-2-36183-646-7, online presentation archive on the NooSFere website).
  • (fr) Simon Bréan (préf. Gérard Klein), La Science-fiction en France: Théorie et histoire d'une littérature, Paris, Presses Université Paris-Sorbonne, coll. "Lettres Francaises", 2012, 96 p. (ISBN 978-2-84050-851-9).
  • (fr) Guy Costes and Joseph Altairac (préf. Gérard Klein), Rétrofictions, encyclopédie de la conjecture romanesque rationnelle francophone, de Rabelais à Barjavel, 1532-1951, t. 1: lettres A à L, t. 2: lettres M à Z, Amiens / Paris, Encrage / Les Belles Lettres, coll. "Interface" (no 5), 2018, 2458 p. (ISBN 978-2-251-44851-0).
  • (fr) Jean-Marc Gouanvic, La science-fiction française au xxe siècle (1900-1968): essai de socio-poétique d'un genre en émergence, Amsterdam, Rodopi, coll. "Faux titre: études de langue et littérature françaises" (no 91), 1994, 292 p. (ISBN 978-90-5183-775-9, online presentation archive).
  • (fr) Natacha Vas-Deyres, Ces Français qui ont écrit demain: utopie, anticipation et science-fiction au xxe siècle, Paris, Honoré Champion, coll. "Bibliothèque de littérature générale et comparée" (no 103), 2013, 533 p. (ISBN 978-2-7453-2371-2, online presentation archive).
  • (fr) Natacha Vas-Deyres (dir.), Patrick Bergeron (dir.) and Patrick Guay (dir.), C'était demain: anticiper la science-fiction en France et au Québec (1880-1950), Pessac, Presses universitaires de Bordeaux, coll. "Eidôlon" (no 123), 2018, 423 p. (ISBN 979-10-91052-24-5, online presentation archive).
  • (fr) Pierre Versins, Encyclopédie de l'utopie, des voyages extraordinaires et de la science-fiction, Lausanne, L' ge d'Homme, 1972, 1037 p. (ISBN 978-2-8251-2965-4).

Articles edit

The scientific-marvelous: generalities edit

  • (fr) [Boutel 2015] Jean-Luc Boutel, "La littérature d'imagination scientifique: genèse et continuité d'un genre", in Jean-Guillaume Lanuque (dir.), Dimension Merveilleux scientifique, Encino (Calif.), Black Coat Press, coll. "Rivière Blanche", 2015 (ISBN 978-1-61227-438-6), p. 295-356.
  • (fr) [Bréan 2015] Simon Bréan, "Fuir l'exotisme: l'"aventure nostalgique" du merveilleux-scientifique français", Nineteenth-Century French Studies, vol. 43, nos 3-4, printemps-été 2015, p. 194-208 (doi:10.1353/ncf.2015.0010).
  • (fr) [Bréan 2018] Simon Bréan, "Barjavel et le merveilleux-scientifique", in Jean-Guillaume Lanuque (dir.), Dimension Merveilleux scientifique 4, Encino (Calif.), Black Coat Press, coll. "Rivière Blanche", 2018 (ISBN 978-1-61227-749-3), p. 270-285.
  • (fr) [Chaperon 2001] Danielle Chaperon, "Du roman expérimental au merveilleux-scientifique: Science et fiction en France autour de 1900", Europe: Revue littéraire mensuelle, vol. 870, october 2001, p. 51-63.
  • (fr) [Deherly 2019] Françoise Deherly, "De la physiognomonie à la phrénologie" archive, in the Gallica blog, 19 june 2019 (accessed 22 june 2020).
  • [Evans 2018a] Arthur B. Evans (trad. Patrick Dusoulier), "Science-fiction et fiction scientifique en France: de Jules Verne à J.-H. Rosny aîné", ReS Futurae, vol. 11, 2018 (doi:10.4000/resf.1406, read online archive).
  • [Gordon 1988] Rae Beth Gordon, "Le Merveilleux scientifique" and the Fantastic", L'Esprit Créateur, vol. 28, 1988, p. 9-22 (read online archive).
  • (fr) [Hopkins 2018a] Fleur Hopkins, "Généalogie et postérité du genre merveilleux-scientifique (1875-2017): apparitions, déformations et complexités d'une expression", in Jean-Guillaume Lanuque (dir.), Dimension Merveilleux scientifique 4, Encino (Calif.), Black Coat Press, coll. "Rivière Blanche", 2018 (ISBN 978-1-61227-749-3), p. 241-259.
  • (fr) [Hopkins 2019a] Fleur Hopkins, "Approche épistémocritique du merveilleux-scientifique", Romantisme, Armand Colin, vol. 183, january 2019, p. 66-78 (ISBN 978-2-200-93228-2, read online archive).
  • (fr) [Hopkins 2019b] Fleur Hopkins, "Le merveilleux-scientifique: une Atlantide littéraire" archive, in the Gallica blog, 30 april 2019 (accessed 21 june 2020).
  • (fr) [Hopkins 2019c] Fleur Hopkins, "Le merveilleux-scientifique dans le paysage littéraire français" archive, in the Gallica blog, 21 may 2019 (accessed 22 june 2020).
  • (fr) [Hopkins 2019d] Fleur Hopkins, "L’illustration merveilleuse-scientifique dans la presse de vulgarisation. Entre didactisme et enchantement", Revue de la BNF, no 58, january 2019, p. 100-111 (ISBN 978-2-7177-2795-1, read online archive).
  • (fr) [Huftier 2003] Arnaud Huftier, "Déliquescence et déplacement du merveilleux scientifique dans l'entre-deux-guerres: Maurice Renard, André Couvreur et Rosny aîné", in Arnaud Huftier (dir.), La Belgique: un jeu de cartes?, Valenciennes, Presses universitaires de Valenciennes, coll. "Lez Valenciennes" (no 33), 2003, 304 p. (ISBN 978-2-905725-57-8), p. 75-132.
  • (fr) [Hummel 2017] Clément Hummel, "Rosny aîné et le fantasme de l'âge d'or de l'anticipation française", Academia.edu, 2017, p. 24 (read online archive).
  • (fr) [Lanuque 2015] Jean-Guillaume Lanuque, "Le retour du refoulé? Sur le renouveau du merveilleux scientifique", in Jean-Guillaume Lanuque (dir.), Dimension Merveilleux scientifique, Encino (Calif.), Black Coat Press, coll. "Rivière Blanche", 2015 (ISBN 978-1-61227-438-6), p. 359-377.
  • (fr) [Lanuque 2018] Jean-Guillaume Lanuque, "La bande-dessinée, avenir du merveilleux-scientifique?", in Jean-Guillaume Lanuque (dir.), Dimension Merveilleux scientifique 4, Encino (Calif.), Black Coat Press, coll. "Rivière Blanche", 2018 (ISBN 978-1-61227-749-3), p. 287-302.
  • (fr) [Lehman 2006] Serge Lehman, "Hypermondes perdus", in Chasseurs de chimères, l’âge d’or de la science-fiction française, Paris, Omnibus, 2006 (ISBN 978-2-258-07048-6), p. I-XXV.
  • (fr) [Marron 2018] Mathilde Marron, "Université de l'Imaginaire: Fleur Hopkins et Les Invisibles" archive, in ActuSF, 12 april 2018.
  • (fr) [Musnik 2019] Roger Musnik, "De Jules Verne à Maurice Renard: les précurseurs" archive, in the Gallica blog, 4 june 2019 (accessed 22 june 2020).

Novel: Le Merveilleux-scientifique selon Maurice Renard edit

  • (fr) [Chabot 2018] Hugues Chabot, "Merveilleux-scientifique et merveilleux-logique chez Maurice Renard: une épistémologie romancée?", ReS Futurae, vol. 11, 2018 (DOI https://doi.org/10.4000/resf.1278, read online archive).
  • (fr) [Evans 2018b] Arthur B. Evans, "La science-fiction fantastique de Maurice Renard", ReS Futurae, vol. 11, 2018 (DOI https://doi.org/10.4000/resf.1439, read online archive).
  • (fr) [Hopkins 2018b] Fleur Hopkins, "Écrire un "conte à structure savante": apparition, métamorphoses et déclin du récit merveilleux-scientifique dans l’œuvre de Maurice Renard (1909-1931)", ReS Futurae, vol. 11, 2018 (DOI https://doi.org/10.4000/resf.1296, read online archive).
  • (fr) [Pézard 2018a] Émilie Pézard, "Défense et illustration d’un genre. Le merveilleux scientifique défini par Maurice Renard (1909-1928)", ReS Futurae, vol. 11, 2018 (DOI https://doi.org/10.4000/resf.1383, read online archive).
  • (fr) [Pézard 2018b] Émilie Pézard, "L’ombre de la merveille. Le merveilleux scientifique au second degré de Maurice Renard", ReS Futurae, vol. 11, 2018 (DOI https://doi.org/10.4000/resf.1312, read online [archive]).
  • (fr) [Van Herp 1956] Jacques Van Herp, "Maurice Renard, scribe de miracles", Fiction, OPTA, no 28, march 1956, p. 107-110.

External links edit

  • "Le Merveilleux-scientifique. Une science-fiction à la française - Bibliographie sélective" archive, at bnf.fr, April 2019 (accessed July 30, 2020) (in French)
    • Selective bibliography of studies and novels relating to the scientific-marvelous genre.
  • "NooSFere" archive (in French)
    • Online encyclopedia of science fiction.
  • Jean-Luc Boutel, "Sur l'autre face du monde" archive (in French)
    • Blog devoted to the scientific-marvelous.
  • Philippe Éthuin, "ArchéoSF" archive (in French)
    • Site devoted to reviews of early science fiction.

scientific, marvelous, also, spelled, with, hyphen, scientific, marvelous, literary, genre, that, developed, france, from, 19th, century, middle, 20th, century, akin, today, science, fiction, this, literature, scientific, imagination, revolves, around, themes,. Scientific marvelous also spelled with a hyphen scientific marvelous is a literary genre that developed in France from the end of the 19th century to the middle of the 20th century Akin today to science fiction this literature of scientific imagination revolves around key themes such as mad scientists and their extraordinary inventions lost worlds exploration of the solar system catastrophes and the advent of supermen A few themes from the scientific marvelous genre clockwise the omnipresence of urban air transport prehistoric creatures rampaging through Paris artificial man interplanetary flight and extraterrestrial encounters Illustrations by Thomas Girard Prince Gigi for Le Vingtieme Siecle La vie electrique by Albert Robida L Effrayante Aventure by Jules Lermina La Poupee sanglante fr by Gaston Leroux and Doctor Omega by Arnould Galopin Emerging in the wake of Jules Verne s scientific novels this literary current took shape in the second half of the 19th century moving away from the Verne model and centering on a new generation of authors such as Albert Robida Camille Flammarion J H Rosny aine and Maurice Renard the latter claiming the works of the more imaginative novelists Edgar Allan Poe and H G Wells as his model Consequently in 1909 Renard published a manifesto in which he appropriated a neologism coined in the 19th century scientific marvelous adding a hyphen to emphasize the link between the modernization of the fairy tale and the rationalization of the supernatural Thus defined the scientific marvelous novel set within a rational framework relies on the alteration of a scientific law around which the plot is built in order to give the reader food for thought by presenting the threats and delights of science Mainly employed by popular novelists this genre draws on the sciences and pseudo sciences that resonate with public opinion such as radiographic electrical and biological discoveries However despite the theoretical foundation provided by Maurice Renard in 1909 scientific marvelous literature failed to take shape as a literary movement and in the end constituted no more than a heterogeneous and scattered literary whole Despite the arrival of a new generation of authors such as Jose Moselli fr Rene Thevenin fr Theo Varlet fr Jacques Spitz and Andre Maurois this literature failed to renew itself and gradually declined from the 1930s onwards while at the same time in the United States literature of scientific imagination enjoyed great success under the name of science fiction with a broadening of its themes Presented as a new genre science fiction arrived in France in the 1950s and seducing French authors and readers completed the demise of the scientific marvelous current and its generations of writers A marginal and unassumed genre during the second half of the 20th century the scientific marvelous has been the subject of renewed public attention since the late 1990s thanks to the critical work of a number of researchers and the reappropriation of this forgotten literary genre by authors particularly in the comic strip medium Contents 1 Origins 2 Definition 2 1 The scientific marvelous a literature of the imaginary with vaguely defined boundaries 2 2 Theorizing a literary genre the Renardian scientific marvelous novel 2 2 1 The 1909 Manifesto 2 2 2 Evolution of the term from the scientific marvelous novel to the novel of hypothesis 3 Popular literature 3 1 A generation of writers in love with scientific conjecture 3 2 The favourite themes of the scientific marvelous 3 3 Publication media that encourage a popular audience 4 Other media for the scientific marvelous 4 1 Enchanting science through illustrations 4 2 The scientific marvelous theater 5 Declin et disparition 6 Posterity 6 1 A look back at the scientific marvelous 6 1 1 Critique studies 6 1 2 A literary genre in its own right 6 2 A century of discontinuous reissues 6 3 Genre update 7 Notes 8 References 9 Bibliography 9 1 Primary sources 9 2 Publications 9 3 Articles 9 3 1 The scientific marvelous generalities 9 3 2 Novel Le Merveilleux scientifique selon Maurice Renard 10 External linksOrigins edit nbsp Published in the first half of the 19th century Edgar Allan Poe s novels and short stories frequently use the figure of the scientist and the theme of scientific discovery 1 prefiguring the scientific marvelous genre nbsp John Progres protector genius of modern times in Le Monde tel qu il sera fr a futuristic novel by Emile Souvestre 1846 Although some authors such as Rabelais experimented with conjectural literature early on in their fictional careers 2 it wasn t until the 19th century that the genre really took off 3 In fact as early as the end of the eighteenth century Charles Georges Thomas Garnier fr began publishing his Voyages imaginaires songes visions et romans cabalistiques fr between 1787 and 1789 the first collection devoted to the literature of the imaginary 4 In its thirty six volumes the collection offers seventy four conjectural tales on the themes of utopia exploration and scientific anticipation 5 In the 19th century despite a short lived attempt at structuring literature of this kind remained scattered and diffusely published In 1834 Felix Bodin fr attempted to catalogue all the inventions from which humans could benefit in Le Roman de l avenir fr The following year Edgar Allan Poe published The Unparalleled Adventure of One Hans Pfaall a journalistic hoax detailing a man s incredible journey to the Moon In 1846 Emile Souvestre published Le Monde tel qu il sera fr an anticipation tale set in the year 3000 It is still considered a major work of dystopian literature In 1854 C I Defontenay broke new ground in scientific fantasy literature with the publication of Star ou PS de Cassiopee fr The novel included detailed descriptions of the habits and customs of an extraterrestrial civilization 6 However this production does not establish a specific literary genre due to its scattered nature as many novelists attribute such ramblings to the narrator s dreams or madness Nonetheless it has yet to establish itself 7 nbsp Jules Verne s novels popularized tales of scientific imagination This literature underwent a crucial shift with the release of Jules Verne s scientific novels which played a key role in popularizing a new literary genre As one of the pioneers of science fiction Verne s impact on stories rooted in scientific imagination is profound so much so that it eclipsed a whole emerging literary movement that was slowly coalescing around several writers 8 Nonetheless during the rise of Vernian stories the scientific marvel genre emerged cautiously coinciding with the progress of both sciences and pseudosciences Likewise from the 1880s onwards psychiatric observations occupied a place in popular imagination 9 Indeed the studies on hypnosis conducted by Doctors James Braid and Eugene Azam in the 1840s followed by the research of Doctor Charcot in the latter part of the nineteenth century revealed the mysteries of every individual thereby transforming the once perceived supernatural phenomena into a natural occurrence and providing a rational explanation for the remarkable abilities manifested by convulsionaries or those possessed 10 This scientific community was enriched by notable researchers like Marie and Pierre Curie Charles Richet and Camille Flammarion They systematically investigated unexplained phenomena by focusing on uncovering hidden worlds long range communication and X ray vision 11 By the close of the nineteenth century public opinion became more sensitive to scientific theories as practices previously regarded as outlandish sought validation as scientific disciplines including phrenology 12 hypnotherapy and fakirism 13 Technological advancements such as the discovery of X rays and endeavors to communicate with Mars further contributed to this increasing sensitivity These newly emerging scientific or pseudo scientific developments have been prominently featured in publications such as Je sais tout and Lectures pour tous These magazines consecutively published articles that disseminated and speculated about the future of science accompanied by anticipatory short stories 14 Pseudo sciences and scientific progress provide loose inspiration for the genre nbsp Phrenology a pseudo science fashionable in the 19th century nbsp A hypnotherapy session nbsp A fakir lying on a bed of nails nbsp Charcot teaching a clinical lesson at the Salpetriere nbsp Camille Flammarion in his observatory nbsp Pierre and Marie Curie in their laboratory The late 19th century witnessed a new generation of writers such as J H Rosny aine utilizing science and pseudoscience for purely fictional purposes 15 This marked a significant departure from their predecessors who employed the conjectural element as a pretext following in the footsteps of Savinian Cyrano de Bergerac s utopian Jonathan Swift s satires and Camille Flammarion s astronomical exposes 16 Definition editThe scientific marvelous a literature of the imaginary with vaguely defined boundaries edit nbsp Prior to its appropriation by Maurice Renard the term scientific marvelous was mainly used to refer to the work of H G Wells The term scientific marvel was ambiguous before Maurice Renard s seminal manifesto It had varying meanings 17 Literary critics coined this neologism in the 19th century to designate all works of fiction relating to science whether they aimed to merge science and wonder or were generally scientific novels 18 In 1875 Louis Enault a journalist coined the term scientific marvel to describe the plot of Victorien Sardou s La Perle noire which utilizes scientific explanations to justify unlikely events 19 Literary critic Charles Le Goffic associated the term with the scientific novels of Jules Verne in his study Les romanciers aujourd hui 1890 The term Wonder was coined by Joseph Pierre Durand fr a physiologist in his book Le Merveilleux scientifique in 1894 to describe the scientific study of phenomena that were once deemed marvelous 20 However during the early 20th century literary critics primarily used the term to refer to H G Wells novels Marcel Reja a psychiatrist discussed this usage in his 1904 article published in Le Mercure de France titled H G It is plausible that Maurice Renard initially came across the term scientific marvel in H G Wells works The Concept of Scientific Marvel in the Writings of Maurice Renard and its Origins in H G Wells 19 Comparing the scientific imagination of Wells and Jules Verne is a recurring theme among critics analyzing the intersection of science and imagination When Renard published his groundbreaking article scholars had already been intrigued by this new literary genre for years 21 Theorizing a literary genre the Renardian scientific marvelous novel edit nbsp Between 1909 and 1928 writer Maurice Renard set about theorizing the concept of the scientific marvel At the turn of the 20th century the term scientific marvel held various connotations until Maurice Renard redefined the phrase in 1909 Follow conventional academic structures including regular author and institution formatting while using clear objective language with a passive tone avoiding personal perspectives and hedging Additionally maintain formal register precise word choice and grammatical correctness while using consistent citation and avoiding filler words He outlined his literary agenda in three articles notably Du roman merveilleux scientifique et de son action sur l intelligence du progres which debuted in Le Spectateur during October 1909 and Le Merveilleux scientifique et La Force mysterieuse de J H Rosny aine was published in La Vie in June 1914 and Le roman d hypothese was published in the magazine ABC in 1928 nb 1 22 The writer s literary career showcased evolution in not only the definition of the genre but also its name thereby complicating the understanding of the term scientific marvel 23 The 1909 Manifesto edit The scientific marvelous novel is fiction whose basis is a sophism whose object is to lead the reader to a contemplation of the universe closer to the truth whose means is the application of scientific methods to the comprehensive study of the unknown and the uncertain Maurice Renard In the 19th century literary critics pondered the future of fantastique stories Maurice Renard believed that the gradual disappearance of the supernatural due to scientific advances required a renewal of fantasy Therefore writers must use science to create and explore new forms of the marvelous in the face of this disenchantment with the world 24 In 1909 the writer released a manifesto titled Du roman merveilleux scientifique et de son action sur l intelligence du progres The manifesto aimed to establish the existence of a novelistic genre with autonomy and literary value within the critical field 25 In this article the author establishes compositional rules for rational novelistic conjecture 26 and introduces the concept of scientific marvel previously applied to certain works by writers such as H G Wells J H Rosny aine and Jules Verne 27 However the author does not simply acknowledge the existence of the scientific marvel theme but rather strictly defines and elevates it to a distinct literary genre In his opinion the change in status justifies a new syntax specifically including a hyphen between the two words which incidentally changes the noun into an adjective 28 nbsp According to Maurice Renard proponents of the scientific marvelous genre need to follow the same approach as Robert Louis Stevenson with his novel The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde published in 1886 Maurice Renard defines the scientific marvelous novel as a literary genre in which science is utilized as a disruptive element as opposed to a mere setting The plot follows a rational framework while a scientific law be it physical chemical psychic or biological is altered or discovered 29 Then the novelist must envision all potential ramifications 30 Furthermore Renard implores his colleagues to venture into the unknown realms of science creating a vertiginous experience for the reader 31 Defined as a scholarly structured story the scientific marvelous novel aims to encourage readers to question themselves and view the world from a different perspective 29 Inspired by the naturalist novel of Emile Zola it serves as a laboratory of ideas observing how the environment affects the characters 29 Furthermore since the legitimacy of the genre stems from its philosophical scope Maurice Renard chose to publish his article in Le Spectateur a critical and philosophical journal instead of a literary review 32 Renard aimed to establish a literary movement around the genre through his manifesto He first establishes himself in a genre that is well known to critics by claiming renowned fantasy authors First and foremost this work honors Edgar Poe for his establishment of the scientific marvelous novel at its purest level nb 2 and then H G Wells for expanding the genre through the profusion of his works Along with the two genre founders Maurice Renard lists Auguste de Villiers de L Isle Adam Robert Louis Stevenson and Charles Derennes as the creators of this new genre through their respective works The Future Eve 1886 Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1886 and Le Peuple du Pole fr 1907 33 nbsp Maurice Renard s 1909 manifesto was republished as a preface to The Blue Peril in 1911 ensuring its posterity Maurice Renard defines the scientific marvelous novel in opposition to specific works from which he chooses to distance himself He categorically rejects Jules Verne accused of contributing to pigeonholing the scientific novel as literature for young people a publishing sector far removed from the intellectual demands Renard aimed to meet 34 Moreover Verne is also accused of either popularizing science or extrapolating from reality while Renard sought to break with reality 35 Indeed Jules Verne s focus on writing scientifically plausible novels sets him apart from Renard s theory of imagining science in unknown territories 36 Verne also refrains from endorsing the educational adventure stories of Andre Laurie and Paul d Ivoi fr 29 or Albert Robida s humorous anticipations that hold a satirical purpose 37 The purpose of the scientific marvelous story differs from that of anticipation While anticipation is satisfied with placing the storyline in the future scientific marvelous novels envision the outcomes of modern or future innovations 38 Maurice Renard constructs his plots through the same intellectual means commonly applied in scientific activities 39 yet they remain rooted in an imaginative fictional science 40 The manifesto made a significant impact 41 After its initial release critics Edmond Pilon and Henry Durand Davray fr reaffirmed Renard s article though it was predominantly its reissue two years later as a preface to The Blue Peril that secured its longevity In 1915 Hubert Matthey published Essai sur le merveilleux dans la litterature francaise depuis 1800 wherein he frequently alluded to the 1909 manifesto The term was discussed by critics until 1940 whether in an obituary of Rosny aine or in the writings of representatives of the genre and its defenders including Gaston de Pawlowski and Andre Maurois 42 During the 1910s and 1920s two opposing factions emerged On one hand there were the advocates of the scientific marvelous novel who were actually a small group of Maurice Renard s acquaintances Charles Derennes Jean Ray Rosny aine 43 Albert Dubeux fr and Georges de la Fouchardiere lavished praise on the writer 44 However critics were generally either disinterested or harsh viewing the genre as populist literature or childish entertainment This is exemplified by Jacques Copeau s scathing attack in a 1912 article published in La Nouvelle Revue Francaise 41 Evolution of the term from the scientific marvelous novel to the novel of hypothesis edit The term roman merveilleux scientifique was developed by Maurice Renard between 1909 and 1928 to earn acknowledgment and prevent the extinction of the genre The predicament persisted in differentiating the novel from Jules Verne whose literary style still eclipsed all scientific imaginative literature 45 Gradually the lack of success in establishing a literary movement was evident in the author s frustrated tone especially in the 1923 article Since Sinbad However his comments sharpness was diminished in Le roman d hypothese a disillusioned text in which he seemed to have abandoned his literary objectives After 1928 he refrained from publishing critical articles and his literary output in this category was minimal Le Maitre de la lumiere fr 1933 and the narrative L an 2000 1938 46 nbsp In 1914 Maurice Renard added J H Rosny aine to the list of writers of scientific marvelous novels with the release of La Force mysterieuse fr In 1914 Maurice Renard reviewed Rosny aine s La Force mysterieuse fr and used it as an opportunity to develop his own concepts on the scientific marvelous novel He published this work under his name The theorist changed his pen name to counter criticism of the genre which accused it of relying too heavily on fantasy at the expense of scientific rigor As early as 1908 the writer used the term conte a structure savante to refer to these literary goals 47 However in 1923 s Depuis Sinbad they rejected merveilleux scientifique in favor of parascientifique to better reflect scientific mysteries 48 Five years later the writer s eponymous article The Novel of Hypothesis renamed the genre once again emphasizing its epistemological value With his new expression Renard aimed to demonstrate that exploring the unknown could offer fresh insights into reality 49 However the impact of these lexical changes was restricted since the phrase roman merveilleux scientifique had already established itself nb 3 50 even if literary critics frequently employed it in a different way to Renard s definition 51 Alongside the onomastic adjustment Maurice Renard also revised the list of writers within the genre In 1914 Rosny aine joined the ranking and Charles Derennes who had not produced anything since Le Peuple du Pole fr was removed 52 Once scientific marvels were recognized as a separate genre by critics it became unnecessary for theorists to defend their purity by excluding authors who introduced sociological or satirical aspects As the articles progress Renard demonstrates greater flexibility regarding the use of scientific marvels recognizing that the genre can serve as a means to an end beyond its own aesthetic purpose The novelist skillfully interweaves other generic codes such as through the incorporation of detective plots in The Blue Peril 1911 and satire in Un homme chez les microbes fr 1928 53 Throughout his career Maurice Renard endeavored to perpetuate the scientific marvelous genre even if it required an easing of its theoretical constraints For a decade he established the Maurice Renard prize for a novel of scientific imagination with the objective of legitimizing the genre From 1922 to 1932 the prize was awarded to ten authors including Marcel Roland and Alexandre Arnoux However their works primarily focused on anticipation and utopia rendering the nominations a testament to the relaxation of the 1909 manifesto nb 4 54 Popular literature editThe scientific marvelous genre emerged in France at the end of the 19th century and thrived until the 1930s gradually declining in the 1950s While Maurice Renard s articles were influential scientific marvelous novels are still considered popular literature due to the themes they explore and their publication media A generation of writers in love with scientific conjecture edit nbsp Guy de Maupassant s The Horla is a scientific marvelous tale before its time With his short story The Horla Guy de Maupassant published a text ahead of its time that blended the fantastic and scientific approaches The author narrates the loss of bearings experienced by an individual suffering from the presence of an invisible being in their environment 55 This 1886 story significantly influenced authors of the scientific marvelous movement incorporating science pseudo science and spiritualism 56 nbsp In La Force mysterieuse fr Rosny aine depicts an immense cataclysm that overturns the entire human race Nevertheless the scientific marvel genre appeared to thrive in 1887 when Rosny aine published the short novel Les Xipehuz which details an encounter between humans and a non organic intelligence from distant prehistory 57 Prior to this scientific marvelous stories had been published unobtrusively However this distinctive text achieved great literary success increasing publicity for the genre A versatile author Rosny aine created non anthropocentric narratives where humans are depicted as a modest part of a larger cosmic entity rather than as an end in themselves 58 Specifically his work follows an extensive war of the kingdoms from the triumphant emergence of our species in prehistoric times to the eventual replacement of Homo sapiens by another life form that dominates the Earth s surface in the distant future 59 Thus in Les Xipehuz Rosny aine presents a confrontation between primitive humanity and an unfamiliar race and in La Force mysterieuse fr 1913 he envisions a modern cataclysm that intensifies compelling humankind to implement social reorganization The author achieved massive commercial success with these novels placing him at the forefront of the scientific marvelous movement among his peers and critics to this day 60 Selected to join the youthful Goncourt literary society together with his brother J H Rosny jeune he was among the individuals who granted the primary Prix Goncourt to a novel of the scientific marvelous Force ennemie by Franco American writer John Antoine Nau which was published in 1903 The novel centers on the subject of space travel through mental projection in which an extraterrestrial lodges in the narrator s mind while exploring a potential invasion 61 Two years later the Prix Goncourt was awarded to Les Civilises fr a speculative novel by Claude Farrere that envisions a future conflict between France and Great Britain 62 Around the same time the literary works of H G Wells also gained popularity with regular reviews in the French press Under the inspiration of several French authors the genre acquired credibility in literature concurrently with Maurice Renard s theorization of it as the scientific marvelous genre For the writer this pursuit of credibility was a genuine challenge given that it was a genre he authored himself 63 His numerous novels embrace popular 56 scientific imagination themes beginning with a fundamental premise that he exhaustively explores For instance the author presents extreme human transplants in Le Docteur Lerne sous dieu an invisible community coexisting with humanity in The Blue Peril a man possessing enhanced vision in L Homme truque and a machine able to replicate objects and bodies in Le Singe 64 In the realm of Wells literature Rosny aine and Maurice Renard emerge as the pioneers of an up and coming literary genre despite not being widely recognized by the public 65 Nevertheless the genre distinguishes itself by providing readers with sensational and extraordinary experiences limited only by the author s imagination These experiences include scenarios such as the Eiffel Tower theft various invasions and even apocalyptic endings 66 In 1908 Jean de La Hire released La Roue fulgurante fr The novel tells the story of a group of earthlings who are abducted by a spaceship and transported to Mercury and Venus This widely popular work solidified La Hire s position as a prominent figure in pre war French science fiction 67 Converted to profitable popular literature he further explored the realm of marvelous science with his successful series featuring the adventures of Leo Saint Clair le Nyctalope Additionally he delved into children s literature with Les Trois Boy scouts and Les Grandes aventures d un boy scout 68 nbsp Best known for the adventures of gentleman burglar Arsene Lupin Maurice Leblanc also tried his hand at the scientific marvelous with Les Trois Yeux fr Popular enthusiasm for new scientific and pseudo scientific theories was embraced by authors and subsequently translated into adventure novels Objective evaluations of theories were prioritized in these works Non scientist writers of scientific marvelous tales such as doctors Andre Couvreur and Octave Beliard fr drew inspiration from popular science magazines 11 At the close of the 19th century Percival Lowell an American businessman and amateur astronomer fervently argued for the presence of canals on Mars This idea of a Martian civilization captivated French novelists further popularizing Lowell s theories 69 Despite not believing in the existence of such canals French astronomer Camille Flammarion shared in the belief that life existed on Mars In 1889 the novel Uranie was published which describes the journey of an astronomer through the stars with Mars as one of the stages 70 nbsp Cover of Le Petit Journal comparing the appearance of surgeons to that of mysterious alchemists April 27 1924 By the end of the 19th century scientific progress was predominantly viewed as advantageous However with subsequent conflicts and wars this perspective shifted and the association between scientific advancements and humanity s destructive tendencies became prevalent Driven by this shift the figure of the Machiavellian scientist 71 such as Gustave Le Rouge s Le Mysterieux Docteur Cornelius fr 1912 1913 gained popularity The practitioner is a leader of an underground criminal organization who conducts carnoplasty experiments meaning the modification of human bodies 72 under the influence of Alexis Carrel s pioneering research on organ transplantation 73 The outbreak of World War I marked a significant turning point in the innovation of scientific breakthroughs 74 While writers in the United States a country relatively spared from the horrors of war continued to explore science as progress for mankind 75 European and particularly French disillusionment with beneficent science significantly darkened the genre s themes ultimately becoming essentially pessimistic 76 Furthermore during the post war era writers of science fiction seemed to have lost their connection to technological advancements such as astronautical testing research into nuclear physics and quantum mechanics despite their previous close following of scientific research Instead they relied on nostalgic themes such as the end of the world lost worlds and evil mad scientists to construct their plots 77 Contemporary critics generally consider scientific marvels a minor genre with vague and imprecise forms However this literature has influenced the evolution of the popular genre 78 encouraging major authors such as Maurice Leblanc Guy de Teramond Gaston Leroux Octave Beliard fr Leon Groc fr Gustave Le Rouge and Jacques Spitz 29 to indulge in it Indeed this literature is widely accepted within the official culture provided that its authors also belong to literary circles Their works are presented as thematic variations of traditional genres such as utopia or the philosophical tale and reviewed by the same literary critics as conventional literature 79 For instance Maurice Leblanc recounts in Les Trois Yeux fr 1919 the experience of a scientist who develops a B ray treated coating allowing past images to appear on a wall as during a cinematograph session 80 Similarly in La Poupee sanglante fr 1923 Gaston Leroux incorporates the themes of automata human transplants and vampirism within a scientific framework 81 The favourite themes of the scientific marvelous edit nbsp In the early 20th century science made it possible to dramatically increase the size of microbes Professeur Tornada fr a mad scientist in his own right literally carries out the experiment 82 Cover of Andre Couvreur fr s novel Une Invasion de macrobes fr published in 1910 by Editions Pierre Lafitte The scientific marvelous genre as defined by Maurice Renard takes as its starting point an alteration of a scientific law whose consequences the author must imagine The proponents of this genre are interested not only in pseudosciences considered as deception such as levitation metagnomy metempsychosis and telepathy but also in future discoveries such as time travel miniaturization of beings and carnoplasty 83 That is why researchers and engineers who initiate discoveries and the consequent adventures are the preferred characters in captivating scientific novels nbsp In 1913 Guy de Teramond imagines a man with X ray vision after a minor operation Cover of L Homme qui voit a travers les murailles fr drawn by Henri Armengol fr Biological laws are a subject of modification for researchers This renders the human body as a malleable substance for well intentioned or not so well intentioned scientists to work with The themes of invisibility mutation immortality 84 and the superman were common in Jean de La Hire s nineteen novels about the Nyctalope s adventures The Nyctalope is a man with augmented vision and an artificial heart while the Hictaner is a man hybridized with a shark in L Homme qui peut vivre dans l eau fr 1910 Louis Boussenard took inspiration from H G Wells The Invisible Man to write Monsieur Rien fr 1907 a nihilist steals the chemical process that allows him to become invisible in order to assassinate Russian dignitaries 85 Authors of scientific marvels systematically seek analogies between scientific phenomena exploring new facets of augmented humanity For instance Maurice Renard s L Homme au corps subtil fr 1913 depicts the ability of Professor Bouvancourt to traverse matter using the penetrating power of X rays on the human body echoing Francois Dutilleul s capabilities from Marcel Ayme s Le Passe Muraille 1941 In Un homme chez les microbes 1928 Renard utilizes the character of a talented scientist to depict the journey of Flechambeau who can shrink himself to meet the atomic people Conversely in Une invasion de macrobes fr 1909 83 Andre Couvreur portrays the opposite process where the malevolent scientist Tornada causes a tremendous increase in microbe size 86 In 1912 Paul Arosa presented Les Mysterieuses Etudes du professeur Kruhl which featured a German scientist who succeeded in sustaining the head of a guillotined man similar to the magic performances of Georges Melies and music hall shows that exhibited living severed heads The same year saw the publication of L Homme a deux tetes by F C Rosensteel which similarly explored this macabre theme Henri Georges Jeanne fr s 87 L Homme qui devint gorille fr in 1921 nb 5 on the other hand involved Professor Fringue transplanting an individual s brain into the skull of a gorilla In Trois Ombres sur Paris fr 1929 nb 6 a researcher formulates a method to create superhumans for the purpose of equalizing all men 88 Les Petits Hommes de la pinede fr 1927 by Octave Beliard provides another instance of biological laws being manipulated when a scientist creates a population of 30 cm tall individuals with accelerated growth that eventually surpasses the scientist s control 89 Finally Louis Forest s On Vole des Enfants a Paris 1906 and Guy de Teramond s L Homme qui Peut Tout 1910 explore the possibility of transforming the minds of children and criminals to enhance their cognitive abilities while Raoul Bigot fr depicts in Nounlegos 1919 a phrenologist scientist who developed a device for reading the human brain without resorting to brain modification 90 nbsp Propelled to his cost on the planet Mars Robert Darvel encounters a Martian bat in Le Prisonnier de la planete Mars fr in 1908 The popularization of pseudoscientific theories inspired fiction writers to explore the psychic realm Gustave Le Rouge in his two part work Le Prisonnier de la planete Mars fr 1908 and La Guerre des vampires fr 1909 envisions an interstellar journey accomplished through the collective psychic energy of thousands of yogis who successfully propel protagonist engineer Robert Dravel to Mars 91 In L me du docteur Kips 1912 Maurice Champagne portrays metempsychosis through a fakir who aids in the reincarnation of the hero in India 92 Joseph Jacquin and Aristide Fabre investigate the anabiosis abilities of fakirs in Le sommeil sous les bles 1927 93 while scientists artificially generate life by theft of psychic energy in Ville hantee 1911 1912 by Leon Groc 94 and Le Voleur de cerveaux 1920 by Jean de Quirielle fr 95 Finally authors in the scientific genre emphasize the risks of using telepathy and mind control exemplified in Andre Couvreur and Michel Corday s Le Lynx 1911 The novel chronicles the adventures of a person who gains the ability to read minds by consuming a drug 96 Similarly in Lucifer novel fr Jean de La Hire depicts Baron Glo van Warteck a villainous mastermind who has created a tool that boosts his psychic abilities He employs this device to enslave his adversaries and prey worldwide 14 nbsp Cover of the novel On a vole la tour Eiffel 1923 by Leon Groc fr illustrated by Henri Armengol fr Alteration and speculation of physical or chemical laws are common techniques used by authors in the science fiction genre In On a vole la tour Eiffel 1921 Leon Groc explores alchemy through the character of Gourdon who develops a method for converting iron into gold 97 Other writers utilize substances like radium to generate scientific fantasies in their plots 98 In Les idees de Monsieur Triggs 1936 nb 7 Jean Ray presents a stone with properties akin to radium to Harry Dickson his valiant private detective The stone cures skin diseases and causes explosions thus serving as a unique and powerful tool 99 Similarly Albert Bailly fr features a transparent spaceship made of ether in L Ether Alpha fr 1929 nb 8 a novel that received the Prix Jules Verne award in the same year showcasing his imaginative writing skills 14 Additionally authors in the scientific fiction genre speculate about the discovery of rays possessing multiple properties For instance in Aigle et colombe novelist Rene d Anjou portrays the alchemist Fedor Romalewski developing various inventions based on scientific discoveries including super radium X rays and Z rays 100 The vanishing of certain materials is a recurring motif in conjectural literature 101 exemplified by the loss of metal in Gaston de Pawlowski s 102 Les Ferropucerons 1912 nb 9 and Serge Simon Held s 103 La Mort du fer 1931 Additionally scientific innovations played a significant role in this imaginative literature With his series of novels Le Nyctalope Jean de La Hire portrays advanced technology in vivid detail featuring aircraft that can hover electric submarines rockets propelled by Hertzian waves and highly advanced weaponry 104 nbsp In 1924 Jose Moselli fr recounts the encounter between two polar explorers and a stranded Mercury inhabitant in Antarctica in Le Messager de la planete fr Intimately connected to adventure novels due to their association with the extraordinary conjectural novels give significant emphasis to travel 105 whether it be on unexplored territories of Earth other planets or even through time with the exploration of unknown life forms J H Rosny aine extensively examined these topics in Les Navigateurs de l infini 1925 and its sequel Les Astronautes fr 1960 along with the terrestrial realms uncovered in Les Profondeurs de Kyamo fr 1891 and Nymphee fr 1893 co written with his brother J H Rosny jeune These works follow the protagonist an explorer journeying through uncharted territories as he discovers alternate civilizations The solar system is a popular subject for novelists to describe the possibility of inhabited planets 106 Some famous examples include Mercury in Jean de La Hire s La Roue fulgurante 1908 and Jose Moselli s Le Messager de la planete 1924 Venusians in Maurice Leblanc s Les Trois Yeux 1920 and Martians in various novels about the Red Planet such as Arnould Galopin s Docteur Omega and Henri Gayar s Aventures merveilleuses de Serge Myrandhal 1908 Some famous examples include Mercury in Jean de La Hire s La La Roue fulgurante fr 1908 and Jose Moselli s Le Messager de la planete fr 1924 Venusians in Maurice Leblanc s Les Trois Yeux fr 1920 and Martians in various novels about the Red Planet such as Arnould Galopin s Docteur Omega and Henri Gayar s 107 Les Robinsons de la planete Mars fr 1908 In addition to life forms discovered on lost or neighboring planets this literature exposes the existence of races that surround us without our awareness One example of such a race is the Sarvants an intelligent arachnoid species that evolves in the stratosphere Maurice Renard details this discovery in The Blue Peril 1911 108 Similarly in Rosny aine s short story Un autre monde nouvelle fr 1895 the narrator Gueldrois employs his augmented vision to detect invisible geometric life forms prevalent in our surroundings 109 Finally the concept of time travel with or without the aid of a machine is widely explored by scientific fiction writers In his novel L Horloge des siecles fr 1902 Albert Robida describes a scenario where after an unknown cataclysm the Earth reverses its rotation causing time to flow backwards 110 In the satirical novel La Belle Valence fr 1923 Andre Blandin and Theo Varlet describe the exploits of Poilus who having come across The Time Machine described by H G Wells accidentally transport their entire infantry troop to 14th century Valencia in the midst of a medieval war between the Spanish and Arab armies 111 nbsp In La vie electrique published in 1890 Albert Robida depicts with his usual satirical eye the progress of an epidemic the accidental result of humanitarian and political research Finally another favorite theme of this literary genre is anticipation Anticipation novels enable us to envision the effects of technological advancements on daily life both in the near and distant future or to envision a future world whether utopian or dystopian For instance in 1910 1911 illustrator Henri Lanos and Jules Perrin co authored Un monde sur le monde a speculative fiction in an ambiguous future where a billionaire faces an uprising triggered by the erection of a towering city of 1 900 meters Leon de Tinseau s Le Duc Rollon fr 1912 1913 portrays a post apocalyptic world in the year 2000 plunged into savagery after a global warfare Ben Jackson s nb 10 novel L ge Alpha ou la marche du temps 1942 takes place in a city of the 21st century characterized by high levels of inequality and widespread use of atomic energy 112 nbsp Destruction of the Earth by the impact of a comet illustration by Henri Lanos fr for Camille Flammarion s Omega The Last Days of the WorldThe theme of anticipated future conflict recurs throughout Albert Robida s works beginning with War in the 20th Century 1887 66 and continuing in his columns for La Caricature and his compositions for La Guerre infernale 1908 a novel by Pierre Giffard written during a time of heightened war tension Robida s illustrations vividly portray the deadly and innovative nature of the impending war featuring armored cars asphyxiating gas and gas masks gigantic shells and lookout posts against aerial bombardment These depictions do not exhibit any nationalistic sentiment Examples include Captain Danrit s 113 tetralogy La Guerre de demain fr 1888 1896 and Albert Bonneau s series Les Samourais du Soleil pourpre fr 1928 1931 66 Finally anticipation can be portrayed as an apocalyptic narrative like the cataclysm in La Force mysterieuse fr 1913 by J H Rosny aine Following an unknown cosmic disturbance the luminous spectrum induces a temporary crisis of madness in all living beings resulting in the decimation of a significant portion of humanity 114 This topic is also examined by astronomer Camille Flammarion in the 1893 work Omega The Last Days of the World This text is both an anticipatory novel and a scientific essay discussing potential ways for the planet Earth to come to an end 115 Publication media that encourage a popular audience edit nbsp Journal des voyages fr magazine offers a mix of exploration stories and scientific adventure serials Maurice Renard encouraged his colleagues to embrace and promote the use of science fiction 27 Although the genre s theories were initially read by the Parisian literary elite of the early 20th century 116 proponents of the genre were primarily popular novelists who published their works in large circulation periodicals and publishing houses geared towards workers To captivate their readers writers crafted exciting tales with archetypal heroes and applied these storylines to scientific marvels as well as popular genres like sentimental literature historical adventure stories and detective tales 35 However detractors soon labeled the works promoted by Renard as a sub genre due to their formulaic nature 117 By the close of the 19th century various scientific journals published scientific adventure tales alongside popularization articles 118 The Journal des voyages fr established by Charles Lucien Huard fr and Sciences et Voyages fr magazine founded by the Offenstadt brothers fr published serialized works in the field of marvelous science in addition to travel accounts Meanwhile La Science illustree fr by Louis Figuier featured popular science articles alongside novels by authors Louis Boussenard and Count Didier de Chousy fr General interest magazines also published a variety of serialized novels including Lectures pour tous which contained short stories from various authors such as Octave Beliard Maurice Renard Raoul Bigot Noelle Roger and J H Rosny aine Rosny aine Additionally the magazines operated by Pierre Lafitte the daily Excelsior journal fr and monthly Je sais tout featured works by Guy de Teramond Leon Groc Andre Couvreur Michel Corday and additional short stories by Maurice Renard and J H Rosny aine Maurice Leblanc Michel Corday Paul Arosa and Jules Perrin were notable authors of speculative fiction in early 20th century France Additionally certain daily newspapers including L Intransigeant which featured multiple novels by Maurice Renard and Leon Groc and Le Matin which published works by Maurice Renard Jean de La Hire and Gaston Leroux 14 provided their readers with sci fi and fantasy novels Some other publications such as L Assiette au beurre and Le Miroir du Monde utilized special issues to publish occasional scientific marvelous stories 119 nbsp Journal des voyages fr No 705 june 1910 nbsp Sciences et Voyages fr No 4 november 1919 nbsp Science amp Vie No 69 march 1923 nbsp Je sais tout june 1928 nbsp An Italian painter Gino Starace fr worked with a number of publishing houses to illustrate popular literature including some scientific marvelous novels such as Andre Delcamp s L Homme au masque de chair published in 1935 in the Le Livre populaire collection by Fayard Several successful publishing houses frequently producing large print runs are also engaged in distributing novels related to scientific marvelouss However no particular compilation explicitly categorizes itself as a representative of this genre Four publishers namely Albert Mericant Jules Tallandier fr Joseph Ferenczi fr and Pierre Lafitte are notable for their consistent catalogs Editions Albert Mericant fr published multiple works by Gustave Le Rouge and Paul d Ivoi in the Le Roman d Aventures series 1908 1909 Additionally works by Leon Groc Jules Hoche and Jean de Quirielle were published in the Les Recits Mysterieux collection 1912 1914 Editions Tallandier regularly had covers illustrated by Maurice Toussaint fr They offered two collections the Bibliotheque des Grandes Aventures 1927 1930 featuring authors such as Henri Gayar fr Norbert Sevestre fr Paul d Ivoi Louis Boussenard and Rene Thevenin This was followed by Le Lynx literary collection fr 1939 1941 with reprints by H J Magog Andre Couvreur and Leon Groc In addition to his periodicals Pierre Lafitte published science fiction novels through his publishing house Editions Pierre Lafitte fr These novels were notably featured in the Ideal Bibliotheque collection which included works by Clement Vautel and Maurice Renard as well as in the Point d interrogation detective collection which featured some speculative works by Maurice Leblanc Ferenczi amp Sons contributed to the distribution of scientific marvelous novels through several collections Many of the covers were illustrated by Henri Armengol Some of the collections include The Great Novels Trips and Adventures The Adventure Book The Small Adventure Novel The Secret Police Files and The Novels of Guy de Teramond a collection dedicated to this particular author 14 Smaller publishers participated in this movement as well including Editions La Fenetre ouverte where writer and translator Regis Messac debuted the Les Hypermondes fr collection in 1935 This series focused on scientific tales nb 11 but was terminated prematurely by World War II 120 Concurrently science fiction literature was expanding abroad Several novels in the scientific imagination genre were translated and published in Italy Great Britain the Czech Republic Russia and Spain a few months after their release in France Notably Il Romanzo Mensile an Italian magazine published 26 tales of scientific imagination between 1908 and 1933 Some of the most famous stories by authors such as Maurice Renard L Homme truque Guy de Teramond L Homme qui voit a travers les murailles fr 14 and Gaston Leroux Le Fauteuil hante fr were included The Transalpine Monthly published by the daily Corriere della Sera showcases a diverse collection of intriguing and imaginative tales from renowned fiction writers across various nations French novelists of scientific marvelous coexist alongside acclaimed authors including Scotland s Conan Doyle England s Henry Rider Haggard Ireland s Sheridan Le Fanu and Australia s Carlton Dawe 121 nbsp The adventures of Dr Cornelius are translated and published abroad Cover by Julien t Felt fr for the Dutch version published in 1927 nbsp Riccardo Salvadori regular illustrator for Il Romanzo Mensile magazine illustrates the Italian version of Guy de Teramond s L Homme qui voit a travers les murailles fr nbsp Maurice Renard s novel Les Mains d Orlac was translated into Czech in 1926 six years after its French publication nbsp An interstellar tale Jean de La Hire s La Roue fulgurante fr was translated into Russian in 1908 nbsp The English version of Gaston Leroux s La Machine a assassiner fr was published by The Macaulay Company in 1935 Other media for the scientific marvelous edit nbsp The towers of Notre Dame de Paris cathedral house the central aircraft station in Albert Robida s Le Vingtieme Siecle 1883 Enchanting science through illustrations edit Illustrators played a significant role in the development of scientific marvelous due to their graphic imagination 122 The first generation of illustrators ventured to utilize innovative imagery satire and caricature in the French press 119 Albert Robida typifies this group of cartoonists with his comical exploits like Saturnin Farandoul s Voyages tres extraordinaires 1879 which parodies Jules Verne s Voyages extraordinaires 123 Gradually the illustrations became less exaggerated as artists developed their own unique style Experimentation occurred on the covers of both magazines and novels as well as within the pages of speculative fictional accounts 119 However publishers maintained closer control over novel cover designs limiting artistic freedom 124 In fact illustrators prioritized technological fantasy over scientific accuracy resulting in a visual rather than scientific approach Consequently scenes frequently portray individuals attired in three piece suits and top hats mingling with futuristic apparatuses like telephonoscopes and aerial railroads 125 nbsp La chasse aux microbes color lithograph by Jean Marc Cote for the En l an 2000 1910 series of futuristic postcards Moreover illustrators are tasked with illustrating the writings of novelists who extrapolate scientific inventions and those of scientists who aim to popularize scientific knowledge 126 resulting in a combination of genres and a reciprocal exchange between the fantastical and the scientific To convey scientific imagery often consisting of unrealistic visuals illustrators must employ their imagination to make it understandable to the reader For instance when viewed under a microscope microbes may resemble snakes or amphibians 127 Illustration is crucial in developing a scientific marvelous imaginary by continuously blending visual elements between the two components This is achieved through various means including the evoked theme the alternating of incredible stories and scientific articles or the use of photomontage The use of the technique that combines photographs and painted inserts which was frequently utilized in Je sais tout magazine serves to accentuate the connection between wonder and science 128 Alongside magazine interior illustrations and novel covers numerous other media aided in the proliferation of this scientific marvelous imagery For instance in the 1950s the chocolatier Cantaloup Catala published a collection of postcards and collectible images 129 titled Anticipation life in the year 2000 to idealize the future means of transportation 130 nbsp Une sortie de bal illustration by Henri Lanos in Je sais tout February 1905 The depiction of the futuristic city is a recurring theme in the graphic art of the marvelous scientist Its significance goes beyond just being a mere setting it symbolizes the society of the future 131 and provides a pretext for showcasing a favorite illustration theme the juxtaposition of man and his monumental surroundings 132 Airborne vehicles dancing against a backdrop of disproportionate architecture is a common feature of this imagery The planes disembark a constant flow of travelers on the rooftops functioning as flight decks 124 The scientific marvelous vision is pervaded by exoticism which is especially emphasized on the book covers Regardless of the storyline the illustrators always include a visual element that announces the adventure in a distant and lesser known nation The desire to disorient readers is paired with an effort to stimulate their imagination exemplified by Georges Conrad s illustrations gracing many covers of the Journal des voyages Conrad draws inspiration from Parisian libraries In contrast space travel tales frequently appear in scientific marvelous works but corresponding illustrations are infrequent and noticeably less groundbreaking 133 nbsp After Gino Starace s drawings accompanied L Homme qui peut vivre dans l eau fr published as a serial in Le Matin in 1909 Henri Armengol designed the cover for the novel published by Ferenczi in 1922 134 With the rise of the scientific marvelous genre illustrators began to establish their own unique styles Albert Robida a prosperous cartoonist and novelist is an emblematic example He advocated for progress 135 but also harbored concerns about its potential excesses Robida conveyed his imaginative concepts and visionary inventions through a diverse range of media including posters lithographs caricatures and novels Through all of these art forms he primarily sought to highlight humanity s flaws with humor While Robida was a prolific illustrator of this graphic genre between the end of the 19th century and World War I 136 several emblematic artists of scientific marvelous imagery emerged after the war Among them is Henri Lanos who began his career in conjectural graphics by illustrating H G Wells novel The Sleeper Awakes 1899 and later contributed to many popular science articles Increasingly popular the artist developed a unique visual style characterized by frequent use of bird s eye views depicting chaotic scenes 137 or individuals juxtaposed with massive structures 127 Notably Henri Armengol and Maurice Toussaint seamlessly integrated their graphic art with literary works cementing their legacy as highly productive contributors to this genre Armengol was the regular illustrator for the Ferenczi publishing house in the 1920s and 1930s and contributed to the success of the Les Romans d aventures collection with its distinctive green background 138 Toussaint also illustrated the covers of numerous collections for the Tallandier publishing house including almost the entire La Bibliotheque des grandes aventures collection with its blue backed covers Finally in popular literature illustration illustrators such as Gino Starace and Georges Vallee collaborated with numerous publishers 139 whereas the majority only occasionally entered the field of conjecture For instance Albert Guillaume illustrated a special issue of L Assiette au beurre in 1901 dedicated to space and Arnould Moreau illustrated Octave Beliard s short story La Journee d un Parisien au xxie siecle in Lectures pour tous in 1910 135 From the 1920s onwards Henri Lanos was succeeded by A Noel as the illustrator of scientific articles in Je sais tout magazine 140 Noel s drawings are closer to industrial art and primarily focus on technical aspects which distinguishes them from the poetic style of his predecessor This shift in generations exemplifies the overall progression of magazines which increasingly prioritize technical advancements over the thought experiments promoted by the Renardian scientific marvelous model 141 nbsp Automobiles de guerre color lithograph from the En l an 2000 series 1910 nbsp L Assiette au beurre devoted an issue to the conquest of the air This satirical exercise in anticipation is entirely illustrated by Albert Guillaume December 1901 nbsp Henri Lanos illustrates Un monde sur le monde a dystopian novel co written with Jules Perrin fr and serialized in Nos loisirs fr magazine 1910 1911 nbsp A variation on the theme of the invisible man Monsieur Rien fr by Louis Boussenard 1907 is illustrated by Georges Conrad fr a regular contributor to the La Vie d aventures collection nbsp Famous illustrator of Fantomas Gino Starace occasionally ventures into the scientific marvelous genre Cover of Paul d Ivoi fr s Canon du sommeil 1908 nbsp Underwater explorers and living fossils on the cover of Maurice Champagne fr s L Ile engloutie 1929 The scientific marvelous theater edit nbsp Following the example of scientific marvelous tales Les Invisibles features science and innovation as the tipping point into a marvelous world nbsp Grand Guignol plays are occasionally rooted in the scientific marvelous genre In October 1884 M Bauer directed an original presentation at the Theatre Antoine Simone Berriau in Paris Les Invisibles The performance showcased microbial life forms using a scientific apparatus that functioned as both a giant microscope and an overhead projector projecting images on a vast white curtain 142 The themes explored in the show such as personification miniaturization and the vision of the invisible were popular in scientific marvelous literature 143 The figures are elucidated by Laguerche an actor dressed in formal attire who assumes the part of a host and intellectual 142 Scientific theatre usually seeks to disseminate science via entertainment and popularization However Les Invisibles sets itself apart as it implicates the onlooker in an active capacity The observer takes on the persona of a laboratory technician who reveals the actual protagonist of the drama the microbe 144 Bauer s show falls under the classification of scientific marvelous theater 145 During this time educational scientific theater emphasized different medical disorders Playwright Andre de Lorde utilized this inspiration to develop his horror performances centering on perilous mental patients presented at the Theatre du Grand Guignol during the early 20th century and beyond As the son of a doctor Andre de Lorde aimed to enhance the authenticity and impact of his productions Consequently he partnered with psychologist Alfred Binet on five occasions to secure scientific validation 146 Moreover Lorde staged eerie plays within the scientific marvelous category and maintained a friendship with Maurice Renard 147 In L Horrible Experience 1909 a drama co written with Binet Dr Charrier attempts to revive his deceased daughter but ultimately succumbs to strangulation by her corpse This story was likely inspired by one of Henri Etienne Beaunis s 146 Contes Physiologiques Furthermore Le Laboratoire des Hallucinations 1916 features a different practitioner conducting medical experiments on his wife s lover as an act of revenge 147 Declin et disparition edit nbsp Not without bitterness Maurice Renard was economically forced to write for a living between the wars The advocates of the scientific marvelous genre have not succeeded in establishing a well defined category They did not endeavor to create a periodical or anthology labeled as such which would not only provide the genre with coherence and unity but also allow readers to recognize it as such 14 This deficiency caused the gradual decline of scientific marvel in the 1930s and beyond 148 Despite some truly original works the genre failed to rejuvenate itself and its themes appeared to recede Space travel was restricted to the solar system and scientific progress was mainly presented as a hazard rather than a social advancement 35 Additionally according to writer Daniel Drode fr the literary style struggles to rid itself of an academic veneer The protagonist of such anticipation novels tends to utilize language passed down from a distant bygone era our own Even when arriving at Planet X in System Y their sentiments are conveyed using verbiage akin to that of Bleriot upon disembarking from his aircraft Should they depict the grandeur of Mars it is as though Napoleon III is extolling the beauty of Biarritz The mere thought of academician Vaugelas operating la chronomachine instills a sense of dread 149 Furthermore authors are producing fewer speculative stories The most recent novel by J H Rosny aine Les Navigateurs de l infini was published in 1925 nb 12 Similarly Maurice Renard who was no longer financially comfortable after the war spaced out his works on the subject in order to concentrate on more commercially successful stories 35 150 In his article Depuis Sinbad 1923 he expressed his disappointment at such economic limitations There s no need to look any further to find out why Wells stopped working along the lines of La Guerre des mondes and why Rosny aine so rarely publishes Xipehuz or Force mysterieuse To make a living by appealing to intelligence that yes would be truly fantastic The two largest popular publishing houses Ferenczi and Tallandier make no distinction between scientific marvelous novels and adventure and travel stories giving the genre a lower profile 151 nbsp Author of novels of scientific imagination Octave Beliard won the first Prix Jules Verne fr for La petite fille de Michel Strogoff in 1927 then the Prix Maurice Renard fr for Les Petits Hommes de la pinede fr in 1930 nbsp Advertisement for the Jules Verne Prize in the magazine Lectures pour Tous fr April 1926 The Prix Maurice Renard disappeared in 1932 when Serge Simon Held declined to accept his award while Hachette Editions established the Prix Jules Verne in 1927 via the Lectures pour Tous magazine 152 The prize s promoters aimed to rejuvenate the scientific novel s foundations by placing it under the famous novelist from Nantes s patronage In fact using Jules Verne as a literary reference is helpful in avoiding excessive imagination by emphasizing scientific elements over the fantastic 153 Additionally employing this French literary figure serves to reinforce the legitimacy of the genre while supporting a marketing campaign to increase sales of the Hetzel collection which has been owned by Hachette since July 1914 154 In 1925 Offenstadt Brothers Publishing House lost their case against Abbe Calippe s classification of Sciences et Voyages as a hazardous magazine for young people 155 156 The ruling adversely affected not only the magazine but also all imaginative scientific literature during the interwar era causing it to practice self censorship 157 After World War II the literature in question was censored in France fr nb 13 due to concerns about its negative impact on young people and influence on juvenile delinquency According to writer and essayist Serge Lehman the scientific marvel genre ended in 1953 with B R Bruss s L Apparition des surhommes fr the final identifiable novel in the genre 158 Parallel to this decline the French public discovered science fiction a literary genre imported from the United States by Raymond Queneau Michel Pilotin and Boris Vian 159 Its promoters presented it as modern literature created by American authors in the 1920s of which Jules Verne was only a distant ancestor 160 This genre not only renewed themes of scientific marvelous but also surpassed the output of pre war French writers 161 Faced with changes in the literary landscape the younger generation of French authors adopted Anglo Saxon themes and asserted their control over the science fiction genre 35 Writer B R Bruss embraced this dominant genre and explored new themes including space exploration 162 As a result the scientific marvelous genre considered inferior due to its popular appeal 163 faded into obscurity while Jules Verne and American authors gained prominence In collective memory the latter has overshadowed 50 years of imaginative scientific literature 14 now known as literary Atlantis 29 Posterity editAt the start of the 21st century the genre of science fiction and fantasy has made a resurgence in popularity This has been due to not only the republishing of numerous stories from previous decades but also the appropriation of its unique aesthetic and iconic characters by new writers who now have access to these public domain creations However the growing critical study of this speculative literature accompanies this renewed interest 164 A look back at the scientific marvelous edit nbsp Alongside American science fiction short stories Jean Jacques Bridenne wrote articles in Fiction magazine in the 1950s devoted to a number of French writers of the scientific imagination Critique studies edit In 1950 Jean Jacques Bridenne published La Litterature francaise d imagination scientifique sharing pioneering research on novels resulting from late 19th century 165 scientific discoveries and providing insights into the genre The magazine Fiction also published his articles on several turn of the century writers 166 Enthusiasts of turn of the century popular literature came together in the mid 1960s to share their collections 167 They produced fanzines containing book listings and reviews among which two mimeographed 168 newsletters emerged as prominent among collectors the publication Desire 1965 1981 nb 14 edited by Jean Leclercq and Le Chasseur d Illustres renamed Le Chercheur des Publications d autrefois in 1971 1967 1977 by Marcel Lagneau and George Fronval fr 169 170 The newsletters reputations were well established Beyond these circles of science fiction enthusiasts it was not until the 1970s nb 15 that science fiction specialists delved into the production of scientific marvelous works which subsequently led to publication for general audiences 29 In 1973 Jacques Sadoul published Histoire de la science fiction moderne 1911 1971 which primarily focused on Anglo Saxon science fiction despite acknowledging the genre s existence in Europe 171 Pierre Versins Encyclopedie de l utopie des voyages extraordinaires et de la science fiction fr 1972 and Jacques Van Herp s Panorama de la science fiction 1974 represented the earliest comprehensive research on the genre 165 nbsp Joseph Altairac publishes in 2018 with his colleague Guy Costes the Retrofictions encyclopedie de la conjecture romanesque rationnelle francophone fr devoted to French speaking conjectural literature and imagery Since the turn of the millennium the public s fascination with popular serialized fiction specifically those featuring scientific marvels has invigorated scholarly analysis of this genre 172 In 1999 Serge Lehman published Les mondes perdus de l anticipation francaise in Le Monde diplomatique bringing attention to a neglected section of French language literary heritage In 2006 he followed up with the publication of the short story collection Chasseurs de chimeres The text already adheres to all the given principles and consists of a single sentence without any context to expand on Therefore the revised text is L ge d or de la science fiction francaise The Golden Age of French Science Fiction in which he undertakes an initial reflection on this literature of scientific imagination A number of specialized websites such as Philippe Ethuin s Archeosf and Jean Luc Boutel s Sur l autre face du monde are also part of this rediscovery movement taking stock of and critiquing these early works 173 In 2000 Jean Marc Lofficier released French Science Fiction Fantasy Horror and Pulp Fiction an extensive encyclopedia in English about French language science fiction In the late 19th and early 20th centuries academic literature on scientific imagination is gaining significance and many studies are being published Jean Marc Gouanvic published his thesis on French science fiction in the 20th century 1900 1968 in 1994 Natacha Vas Deyres fr wrote Ces Francais qui ont ecrit demain in 2012 followed by Daniel Fondaneche s La Litterature d imagination scientifique in 2013 These various critical studies are supported by publications in recently established magazines focusing on popular literature such as Rocambole Le Belphegor Le Visage vert and the digital magazine Res Futurae 174 as well as highly specialized ones like Le Telephonoscope which concentrates on Albert Robida and his works and Le Quinzinzinzili the Messacquian bulletin that examines the literary output of Regis Messac 175 In 2018 Guy Costes and Joseph Altairac both science fiction specialists published Retrofictions encyclopedie de la conjecture romanesque rationnelle francophone fr The encyclopedia provides a comprehensive inventory of all French language conjectural literature and imagery paying explicit tribute to Pierre Versins encyclopedia 176 In 2019 Fleur Hopkins an art history doctoral student is curating an exhibition at the Bibliotheque nationale de France titled Le merveilleux scientifique Une science fiction a la francaise This exhibition provides a sincere acknowledgment to the scientific marvelous genre and aims to enhance its visibility amongst the general audience nbsp In April 1926 Hugo Gernsback founded Amazing Stories the first magazine devoted exclusively to science fiction A literary genre in its own right edit While scientific marvel was once referred to as various names nb 16 for imaginative scientific literature in the early 20th century by the post war years it became closely associated with the science fiction genre During this time period it was commonly called proto science fiction ancient science fiction or primitive science fiction as it introduced themes found in modern science fiction that emerged in the United States from the 1920s onwards 177 This link between scientific advancements identified as the golden age of French science fiction by Serge Lehman and post war science fiction is evident through their mutual focus on specific themes such as encounters with extraterrestrial life creation and integration of artificial or augmented beings and catastrophic events 29 Certain scientific marvelous novels share similar themes and a narratological character that brings them closer to science fiction narratives The novels by Rosny aine for example depict a universe unlike our own forcing readers to reconstruct their frames of reference to follow the story 178 However some researchers challenge the notion that scientific marvel equals proto science fiction Indeed the interpretation that scientific marvel is merely a genre under construction stems from a teleological viewpoint However this interpretation not only erases its own distinct characteristics but also disregards the fact that it is influenced by various literary traditions such as the experimental novel fantasy and the scientific adventure novel 179 While discussing scientifiction s nb 17 definition in Amazing Stories magazine Hugo Gernsback cites Edgar Allan Poe Jules Verne and H G Wells as its models but fails to reference any authors of scientific marvelous novels denying any connection between the two genres 180 Despite sharing common ancestors and characteristics scientific marvel and science fiction exhibit significant differences For instance the interwar period s scientific marvelous novel portrays a pessimistic view of science different from the essentially optimistic discourse of Anglo Saxon science fiction 57 A century of discontinuous reissues edit Two significant periods in the republishing of fantastic scientific classics emerged simultaneously with critical works During the 1960s a favorable time for French science fiction the initial massive wave of republications focused on collections of science fiction literature 181 This resurgence could either be in response to the dominance of Anglo Saxon science fiction or simply a yearning for a more innocent form of the genre 182 and although the books were still catered to a niche audience they were published on a much bigger scale A second wave of reprints in science fiction literature emerged in the 21st century with small publishing houses such as L Arbre vengeur fr Bragelonne fr Encrage fr Les Moutons electriques fr and Black Coat Press leading the way In this regard Jean Marc Lofficier publishes in both English and French languages through his American owned publishing company Black Coat Press The French language collection is known as Riviere Blanche editorial fr 174 Genre update edit nbsp Cover of Rene Barjavel s novel Ashes Ashes 1943 From the mid 20th century onward the scientific marvelous genre survived only marginally due to the onslaught of American science fiction Rene Barjavel and Maurice Limat 183 were instrumental in keeping the genre alive Barjavel who claims to be the sole heir of Jules Verne and H G Wells has never used the label scientific marvelous 184 Paradoxically while French cinema was also abandoning the genre it found a new home on television after the war in the form of several successful television shows 185 The tradition of French televisual fantasy which was developed thanks to technical innovations that allowed for the creation of live action fakery reached its peak in the 1960s and 1970s before declining in the mid 1980s 186 Exploiting the soap opera genre 187 TV movies rely heavily on adaptations of science fiction novels exemplified by La Poupee sanglante fr 1976 directed by Marcel Cravenne fr 188 La Double Vie de Theophraste Longuet fr 1981 by Yannick Andrei 189 and Le Mysterieux Docteur Cornelius fr 1984 by Maurice Frydland fr 190 It relies on successful original creations including the series Aux frontieres du possible 1971 1974 which blends elements of a detective series and scientific anticipation 191 and La Brigade des Malefices 1971 which combines detective and fantasy genres 192 as well as the soap opera Les Compagnons de Baal fr 1968 which chronicles the esoteric adventures of a journalist controlled by a secret society 193 nbsp In addition to his work as an essayist and anthologist Serge Lehman has revived characters from scientific marvelous novels in the comic strip La Brigade chimerique fr If the label scientific marvel no longer appears in literature the foundation of the genre remains intact the encounter between a human and an extraordinary element be it an object a creature or a physical phenomenon This principle is handed down to future generations of authors Authors like Rene Barjavel Ashes Ashes 1943 Pierre Boulle Planet of the Apes 1963 and Robert Merle Les Hommes proteges fr 1974 drew inspiration from this heritage and reinterpreted it Even more recently authors like Bernard Werber Empire of the Ants 1991 1996 and Michel Houellebecq Atomised 1998 194 have continued to do so In the second half of the 20th century nascent French science fiction SF claimed to exclusively hail from the genre across the Atlantic However it was actually the result of multiple currents with marvelous sci fi serving as just one 195 In addition to this contemporary science fiction which is influenced by both French and Anglo Saxon traditions a fully developed scientific marvel reemerged at the beginning of the 21st century This genre mainly resurfaced through the medium of comics 196 It endured informally during the latter half of the 20th century particularly with Edgar P Jacobs began with the adventures of Blake and Mortimer in 1946 197 followed by Jacques Tardi s Le Demon des glaces fr in 1974 and the The Extraordinary Adventures of Adele Blanc Sec series in 1976 both of which reuse markers of scientific marvelous such as the resurgence of prehistoric animals Another Belgian author duo Francois Schuiten and Benoit Peeters published Les Cites obscures from 1983 which reflects the influence of Jules Verne and Albert Robida Finally a resurgence of scientific marvel occurred through the release of the comic series La Brigade chimerique fr 2009 2010 198 by authors Serge Lehman and Fabrice Colin This work serves as both a tribute to classical literature and a modern reinterpretation presenting numerous European literary superheroes from the early 20th century while also elucidating their disappearance after the events of World War II and the more general concealment of scientific imagination in literary works 199 Following this series Serge Lehman updates the genre with three comics L Homme truque 2013 adapting the short story and novel of the same name by Maurice Renard L Œil de la Nuit fr 2015 2016 featuring the adventures of the Nyctalope and Masque fr 2012 2013 which showcases a resurgence of scientific marvelous in the near future 200 nbsp Jean Marc Lofficier and his wife Randy are contributing to the rediscovery of the scientific marvelous genre with an encyclopedic work English translations of key works in the genre and anthologies of short stories and essays published by Black Coat Press Among the new generation of authors who resurrect literary heritage Xavier Dorison fr and Enrique Breccia introduce mechanically enhanced super soldiers during World War I in Les Sentinelles fr 2008 2014 Jean Marc Lofficier and Gil Formosa tackle Jules Verne s character in Robur comic fr 2003 2005 and Alex Alice delves into the mysteries of the ether in Le Chateau des etoiles fr since 2014 These authors do not simply set their narratives in the Belle Epoque or rely on familiar literary figures Rather they resurrect several important themes of the genre including exploration war and fantastical inventions Some even adopt a periodical format as in Le Chateau des Etoiles which was originally published in fascicles as a nod to the 19th century feuilleton tradition 201 nbsp In Le Paris des Merveilles fr Pierre Pevel imagines the adventures of magician Louis Denizart Hippolyte Griffont in the early 20th century Since 2005 Black Coat Press has been publishing the anthology series Tales of the Shadowmen in addition to its reprint work These collections comprise of short stories that narrate the journeys of heroes and villains from popular culture during the 19th and 20th centuries Furthermore starting from 2007 the series has been available in French under the title Les Compagnons de l Ombre within the Riviere Blanche collection 202 Since 2015 the collection has published an anthological series of short stories titled Dimension merveilleux scientifique The short stories written by various authors intend to revive the French language literary genre that has lost popularity 17 This renewed fascination with scientific advancements appears to be a facet of the wider steampunk trend an uchronian genre of alternative history literature that emerged during the 1990s reimagining a past particularly the 19th century in which technological progress rapidly advanced and became firmly established 203 The scientific phenomenon is resurfacing alongside various literary genres including steampunk and gaslamp fantasy Prominent authors of these genres include Mathieu Gaborit fr and Fabrice Colin with Confessions d un automate mangeur d opium fr 1999 Pierre Pevel with his Paris des Merveilles fr cycle 2003 2015 and Estelle Faye fr with Un eclat de givre 2014 These authors are considered to be the most representative proponents of the early 21st century 204 Notes edit Alongside these three main articles which seek to institutionalize the genre the writer completes and evolves his thinking with Two Observations on the Audience Mr Orville Wright Le canard attraction in Le Spectateur no 31 January 1912 Depuis Sinbad in L Ami du livre June 1923 and Anticipations in Paris Soir no 580 May 1925 Edgar Poe with only two tales The Truth about the Case of Mr Valdemar and Recollections of Mr August Bedloe founded the pure marvel scientific novel In particular critic Jean Morel helped establish the term with his article J H Rosny aine et le merveilleux scientifique published in Le Mercure de France in 1926 After the winner of the 1932 prize Serge Simon Held refused his award so as not to jeopardize his chances of winning the Goncourt Maurice Renard decided to put an end to the literary prize The novel originally appeared in 1911 under the title Le Roman d un singe The novel originally appeared in 1920 under the title Les Surhommes The story was published in Harry Dickson s adventures issue no 152 entitled Les Sept petites chaises The novel first appeared in serial form in the pages of Le Figaro in 1928 under the title Le Baiser de l infini This short story was initially published under the title Au temps des barbares contes futurs in 1909 before being included under the title Les Ferropucerons in Voyage au pays de la quatrieme dimension in 1912 The real author of this novel is Jean Marie Gerbault who pretends to be the translator attributing it to Ben Jackson an imaginary American author While the term science fiction was definitively established in the United States in the 1930s the term scientific novel was favored in France at the same time following the example of scientific romance in use in the United Kingdom since the end of the 19th century Its sequel announced the same year was only published posthumously in 1960 under the title Les Astronautes The July 16 1949 law on publications for young people aims to regulate the distribution of children s books and magazines The periodical ceased publication between 1971 and 1974 then reappeared under the title Desire l ami de litterature populaire with a new numbering Hosted by Noel Arnaud Francis Lacassin and Jean Tortel the pioneering Entretiens sur la paralitterature symposium was held at the Centre culturel international de Cerisy la Salle in 1967 In addition to the term scientific marvel the literature of scientific imagination of the early 20th century is also known as hypothesis novels anticipation novels chimerical extraordinary etc Hugo Gernsback first used and popularized the term science fiction in 1929 in an editorial for the magazine Science Wonder Stories References edit fr Jeremy Chateau Detournements et inconstances de la decouverte scientifique dans l œuvre d Edgar Allan Poe in Azelie Fayolle and Yohann Ringuede eds La decouverte scientifique dans les arts Champs sur Marne LISAA editeur coll Savoirs en Texte 2018 322 p read online archive p 167 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1682 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 2457 fr Boutel 2015 p 304 fr Versins 1972 p 944 fr Boutel 2015 p 305 306 fr Boutel 2015 p 308 fr Boutel 2015 p 309 Gordon 1988 p 9 Gordon 1988 p 18 a b fr Hopkins 2019a p 67 fr Deherly 2019 fr Hopkins 2018a p 244 a b c d e f g h fr Hopkins 2019c Evans 2018a 2 fr Pezard 2018a 13 a b fr Hopkins 2018a p 241 fr Hopkins 2018a p 252 a b fr Hopkins 2018a p 253 fr Pezard 2018a 37 fr Pezard 2018a 2 fr Pezard 2018a 1 fr Hopkins 2018a p 258 fr Pezard 2018a 39 40 fr Pezard 2018a 56 fr Hopkins 2018b 21 a b fr Hopkins 2018a p 246 fr Pezard 2018a 12 a b c d e f g h fr Hopkins 2019b fr Pezard 2018a 50 fr Pezard 2018a 51 fr Pezard 2018a 19 fr Pezard 2018a 2 8 fr Pezard 2018a 23 a b c d e fr Musnik 2019 fr Pezard 2018b 3 Evans 2018a 27 fr Hopkins 2019a p 68 fr Chabot 2018 41 fr Chabot 2018 37 a b fr Pezard 2018a 25 fr Hopkins 2018a p 257 fr Pezard 2018a 4 fr Pezard 2018a 28 fr Hopkins 2018a p 254 fr Pezard 2018a 29 32 fr Hopkins 2018b 10 fr Hopkins 2018b 38 39 fr Pezard 2018a 47 fr Hopkins 2018a p 255 fr Hopkins 2018b 32 fr Pezard 2018a 8 fr Pezard 2018a 16 17 fr Hopkins 2018a p 256 Gordon 1988 p 20 a b fr Bibliographie BnF 2019 p 6 a b fr Lanuque 2015 p 374 fr Boutel 2015 p 316 317 fr Serge Lehman Une Litterature plus complexe et plus haute in J H Rosny aine Serge Lehman presente La guerre des regnes Paris Bragelonne 2020 ISBN 979 10 281 0774 1 pp 776 781 fr Hummel 2017 p 2 fr Boutel 2015 p 319 fr Hummel 2017 p 8 fr Pezard 2018a 24 fr Van Herp 1956 p 108 fr Boutel 2015 p 323 324 a b c fr Boutel 2015 p 328 fr Litterature francaise martienne de 1865 a 1958 ou le merveilleux scientifique a l assaut de la planete rouge Part 1 1865 1930 archive on Mars and Science Fiction accessed January 26 2020 fr Jean Guillaume Lanuque Jean de la Hire le patriotisme anticommuniste d un imaginaire surhumain Dissidences no 5 Spring 2013 2 read online archive fr Brian Stableford trans from English Brian Stableford preface et postface a l edition americaine du Mystere des XV in Emmanuel Gorlier Nyctalope L Univers extravagant de Jean de La Hire Black Coat Press coll Riviere Blanche 2011 171 p ISBN 978 1 61227 016 6 p 157 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 760 761 fr Boutel 2020 p 37 fr Boutel 2020 p 38 fr Gabriel Thoveron Deux siecles de paralitteratures lecture sociologie histoire t 2 de 1895 a 1995 Liege Editions du Cefal coll Bibliotheque des Paralitteratures 2008 452 p ISBN 978 2 87130 268 1 read online archive p 384 fr Vas Deyres 2013 p 123 fr Vas Deyres 2013 p 126 fr Vas Deyres 2013 p 124 fr Vas Deyres 2013 p 130 fr Boutel 2015 p 298 fr Roger Bozzeto Litterature et paralitterature le cas de la science fiction Orientations de recherches et methodes en litterature generale et comparee Publications de l Universite Paul Valery t 1 1984 p 143 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1175 1776 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1242 fr Claude Demeocq Michel Corday Andre Couvreur et les Editions Lafitte 1903 1914 Le Rocambole no 12 Les Editions Pierre Lafitte II autumn 2000 p 26 ISBN 978 2 912349 12 5 a b fr Hopkins 2018a p 248 fr Boutel 2015 p 325 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 336 fr Gaite Lyrique and Fleur Hopkins Fleur Hopkins met en lumiere le merveilleux scientifique archive on Mediapart November 26 2019 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 141 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1302 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 238 239 fr Deherly 2019 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1237 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 436 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1008 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 884 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1680 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 495 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 885 Dominiq Jenvrey Interviewer and Serge Lehman Radium Unlimited archive on ParisLike 2013 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1702 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 68 fr Versins 1972 p 252 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1582 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 927 fr Andre Leborgne Les inventions in Jacques Van Herp Andre Leborgne Yves Oliver Martin et al Cahiers d etudes n 1 Cahier Jean de La Hire Editions de l Hydre 1972 pp 118 119 fr Versins 1972 p 82 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1816 1819 fr Boutel 2015 p 327 fr Boutel 2015 p 323 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1812 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1777 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 287 fr Boutel 2015 p 326 fr Bertrand Tillier Robida et la guerre de demain in Fritz Taubert Vincent Chambarlhac Veronique Liard and Bertrand Tillier eds Veilles de guerre precurseurs politiques et culturels de la Grande Guerre Villeneuve d Ascq Presses universitaires du Septentrion coll Histoire et civilisations 2018 268 p ISBN 978 2 7574 2356 1 pp 237 246 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1817 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 761 fr Evans 2018b 7 fr Boutel 2015 p 300 fr Boutel 2015 p 315 a b c fr Boutel 2020 p 10 fr Lehman 2006 p XII it Fabrizio Foni Alla fiera dei mostri Racconti pulp orrori e arcane fantasticherie nelle riviste italiane 1899 1932 Latina Tunue 2007 334 p ISBN 978 88 89613 20 7 read online archive p 96 98 fr Boutel 2020 p 5 fr Boutel 2020 p 81 a b fr Boutel 2015 p 335 fr Boutel 2020 p 15 fr Hopkins 2019d p 102 a b fr Hopkins 2019d p 103 fr Hopkins 2019d p 105 107 fr Boutel 2020 p 21 fr Boutel 2020 p 35 fr Boutel 2020 p 19 fr Hopkins 2019d p 104 fr Boutel 2020 p 49 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1114 a b fr Boutel 2020 p 24 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1768 fr Boutel 2020 p 93 94 fr Boutel 2020 p 86 fr Boutel 2020 p 89 fr Hopkins 2019d p 110 fr Hopkins 2019d p 111 a b fr Daniel Raichvarg Science et spectacle Figures d une rencontre Delagrave 2000 327 p ISBN 978 2 206 08318 6 p 47 48 fr Marron 2018 Hybridation d un discours savant et de la merveille fr Marron 2018 Les Invisibles un theatre scientifique fr Marron 2018 Un exemple de vulgarisation scientifique a b fr Flore Garcin Marrou Andre de Lorde et Alfred Binet quand le theatre du Grand Guignol passionne les scientifiques Recherches amp educations no 5 Le centenaire de la mort d Alfred Binet October 2011 pp 193 204 doi 10 4000 rechercheseducations 836 read online archive a b fr Marron 2018 Un theatre merveilleux scientifique l union de la feerie et de la vulgarisation fr Boutel 2015 p 340 fr Serge Lehman Une Litterature plus complexe et plus haute in J H Rosny aine Serge Lehman presente La guerre des regnes Paris Bragelonne 2020 ISBN 979 10 281 0774 1 p 770 fr Gouanvic 1994 p 81 82 fr Vas Deyres 2013 p 131 fr Costes and Atairac 2018 p 1664 fr Boutel 2015 p 310 312 fr Claire Barel Moisan Anticipation et legitimation le prix Jules Verne Contextes no 21 2018 doi 10 4000 contextes 6725 read online archive fr Carnet de la Revue la revue Sciences et Voyages jugee par les tribunaux francais Revue des lectures no 1 15th year January 15 1926 pp 19 21 read online archive fr Jacques Van Herp Je sais tout le Roi des Magazines Bruxelles Recto Verso coll Ides et Autres no 54 1986 180 p p 146 fr Lehman 2006 p XX XXI fr Lanuque 2015 p 372 fr Hummel 2017 p 3 fr Lehman 2006 p IV V fr Boutel 2015 p 341 343 fr Brean 2018 p 276 fr Lehman 2006 p XVII fr Lanuque 2015 p 376 a b fr Lanuque 2015 p 376 fr Jean luc Boutel Le merveilleux scientifique Une science fiction a la francaise archive on Sur l autre face du monde 2019 fr Daniel Couegnas Introduction a la paralitterature Paris Seuil 1992 200 p ISBN 978 2 02 013555 9 p 15 fr Sarah Mombert Profession romancier populaire in Loic Artiaga ed Le roman populaire des premiers feuilletons aux adaptations televisuelles 1836 1960 Paris Autrement coll Memoires culture no 143 2008 186 p ISBN 978 2 7467 1200 3 p 57 n 7 fr Catherine Frichet La Collection Bastaire memoires de papier xixe xxie siecles Memoire de Master 2 directed by Ms Nathalie Ponsard Universite Blaise Pascal Clermont Universite 2015 186 p read online archive p 76 fr Laurent Seguin Les collections de romans populaires et leur conservation dans les fonds patrimoniaux de la Bibliotheque nationale de France l exemple du Livre populaire de la Librairie Artheme Fayard Dissertation under the supervision of Frederic Barbier director of the Centre de recherche en histoire du livre de l ENSSIB vol 1 Ecole nationale superieure des sciences de l information et des bibliotheques January 2005 78 p read online archive p 12 fr Hummel 2017 p 4 fr Lanuque 2015 p 359 fr Lanuque 2015 p 364 a b fr Lanuque 2015 p 368 fr Boutel 2015 p 355 fr Frederique Roussel RetroFictions tout l univers d anticipations francophones Liberation September 18 2018 read online archive fr Hopkins 2018a p 242 Evans 2018a 21 fr Hopkins 2018a p 243 244 fr Hummel 2017 p 16 fr Lanuque 2015 p 361 fr Lanuque 2015 p 370 fr Lanuque 2015 p 360 fr Brean 2018 p 275 fr Baudou and Schleret 1995 p 9 fr Baudou and Schleret 1995 p 9 10 fr Christian Bosseno La television francaise aussi CinemAction Editions Corlet Telerama no 74 Le cinema fantastique 1st quarter 1995 p 145 ISBN 978 2 85480 870 4 fr Baudou and Schleret 1995 p 117 118 fr Baudou and Schleret 1995 p 140 141 fr Baudou and Schleret 1995 p 148 151 fr Baudou and Schleret 1995 p 85 87 fr Baudou and Schleret 1995 p 80 84 fr Baudou and Schleret 1995 p 54 57 fr Brean 2018 p 285 fr Boutel 2015 p 303 fr Lanuque 2018 p 287 fr Lehman 2006 p V fr Lanuque 2018 p 288 289 fr Xavier Fournier Super heros Une histoire francaise Paris Huginn amp Muninn 2014 240 p ISBN 978 2 36480 127 1 p 221 222 fr Lanuque 2015 p 366 fr Lanuque 2018 p 299 300 fr Lanuque 2015 p 365 fr Lanuque 2015 p 369 fr Marie Lucie Bougon Cosmogony of French fantasy Genese et emancipation Revue de la BNF no 59 February 2019 p 44 read online archive Bibliography editPrimary sources edit fr Maurice Renard Du roman merveilleux scientifique and de son action sur l intelligence du progres Le Spectateur no 6 october 1909 p 245 261 read online archive Manifesto in which Maurice Renard defines the scientific marvelous novel fr Maurice Renard Le Merveilleux scientifique and La Force mysterieuse de J H Rosny aine La Vie no 16 15 june 1914 p 544 548 read online archive In this review of Rosny aine s La Force mysterieuse Maurice Renard expands on his seminal 1909 article fr Hubert Matthey Essai sur le merveilleux dans la litterature Francaise depuis 1800 Paris Librairie Payot 1915 read online archive A contemporary work in which Hubert Matthey analyzes the scientific marvelous genre and draws up a chronological table of related works fr Maurice Renard Le roman d hypothese A B C no 48 december 1928 p 345 346 read online archive In this article Maurice Renard renames the term scientific marvelous novel of hypothesis to extend the genre s epistemological scope Serge Lehman Les mondes perdus de l anticipation francaise Le Monde diplomatique july 1999 p 28 29 read online archive A pioneering article in the rediscovery of the scientific marvelous genre Publications edit fr Claire Barel Moisan dir and Jean Francois Chassay dir Le roman des possibles l anticipation dans l espace mediatique francophone 1860 1940 Montreal Presses de l Universite de Montreal coll Cavales 2019 483 p ISBN 978 2 7606 4017 7 fr Jacques Baudou and Jean Jacques Schleret Merveilleux fantastique et science fiction a la television francaise Bry sur Marne Paris INA Huitieme art coll Les dossiers du 8e art 1995 183 p ISBN 978 2 908905 09 0 fr Jean Luc Boutel Merveilleux scientifique Bordeaux Les Moutons electriques coll Artbooks feeriques 2020 96 p ISBN 978 2 36183 646 7 online presentation archive on the NooSFere website fr Simon Brean pref Gerard Klein La Science fiction en France Theorie et histoire d une litterature Paris Presses Universite Paris Sorbonne coll Lettres Francaises 2012 96 p ISBN 978 2 84050 851 9 fr Guy Costes and Joseph Altairac pref Gerard Klein Retrofictions encyclopedie de la conjecture romanesque rationnelle francophone de Rabelais a Barjavel 1532 1951 t 1 lettres A a L t 2 lettres M a Z Amiens Paris Encrage Les Belles Lettres coll Interface no 5 2018 2458 p ISBN 978 2 251 44851 0 fr Jean Marc Gouanvic La science fiction francaise au xxe siecle 1900 1968 essai de socio poetique d un genre en emergence Amsterdam Rodopi coll Faux titre etudes de langue et litterature francaises no 91 1994 292 p ISBN 978 90 5183 775 9 online presentation archive fr Natacha Vas Deyres Ces Francais qui ont ecrit demain utopie anticipation et science fiction au xxe siecle Paris Honore Champion coll Bibliotheque de litterature generale et comparee no 103 2013 533 p ISBN 978 2 7453 2371 2 online presentation archive fr Natacha Vas Deyres dir Patrick Bergeron dir and Patrick Guay dir C etait demain anticiper la science fiction en France et au Quebec 1880 1950 Pessac Presses universitaires de Bordeaux coll Eidolon no 123 2018 423 p ISBN 979 10 91052 24 5 online presentation archive fr Pierre Versins Encyclopedie de l utopie des voyages extraordinaires et de la science fiction Lausanne L ge d Homme 1972 1037 p ISBN 978 2 8251 2965 4 Articles edit The scientific marvelous generalities edit fr Boutel 2015 Jean Luc Boutel La litterature d imagination scientifique genese et continuite d un genre in Jean Guillaume Lanuque dir Dimension Merveilleux scientifique Encino Calif Black Coat Press coll Riviere Blanche 2015 ISBN 978 1 61227 438 6 p 295 356 fr Brean 2015 Simon Brean Fuir l exotisme l aventure nostalgique du merveilleux scientifique francais Nineteenth Century French Studies vol 43 nos 3 4 printemps ete 2015 p 194 208 doi 10 1353 ncf 2015 0010 fr Brean 2018 Simon Brean Barjavel et le merveilleux scientifique in Jean Guillaume Lanuque dir Dimension Merveilleux scientifique 4 Encino Calif Black Coat Press coll Riviere Blanche 2018 ISBN 978 1 61227 749 3 p 270 285 fr Chaperon 2001 Danielle Chaperon Du roman experimental au merveilleux scientifique Science et fiction en France autour de 1900 Europe Revue litteraire mensuelle vol 870 october 2001 p 51 63 fr Deherly 2019 Francoise Deherly De la physiognomonie a la phrenologie archive in the Gallica blog 19 june 2019 accessed 22 june 2020 Evans 2018a Arthur B Evans trad Patrick Dusoulier Science fiction et fiction scientifique en France de Jules Verne a J H Rosny aine ReS Futurae vol 11 2018 doi 10 4000 resf 1406 read online archive Gordon 1988 Rae Beth Gordon Le Merveilleux scientifique and the Fantastic L Esprit Createur vol 28 1988 p 9 22 read online archive fr Hopkins 2018a Fleur Hopkins Genealogie et posterite du genre merveilleux scientifique 1875 2017 apparitions deformations et complexites d une expression in Jean Guillaume Lanuque dir Dimension Merveilleux scientifique 4 Encino Calif Black Coat Press coll Riviere Blanche 2018 ISBN 978 1 61227 749 3 p 241 259 fr Hopkins 2019a Fleur Hopkins Approche epistemocritique du merveilleux scientifique Romantisme Armand Colin vol 183 january 2019 p 66 78 ISBN 978 2 200 93228 2 read online archive fr Hopkins 2019b Fleur Hopkins Le merveilleux scientifique une Atlantide litteraire archive in the Gallica blog 30 april 2019 accessed 21 june 2020 fr Hopkins 2019c Fleur Hopkins Le merveilleux scientifique dans le paysage litteraire francais archive in the Gallica blog 21 may 2019 accessed 22 june 2020 fr Hopkins 2019d Fleur Hopkins L illustration merveilleuse scientifique dans la presse de vulgarisation Entre didactisme et enchantement Revue de la BNF no 58 january 2019 p 100 111 ISBN 978 2 7177 2795 1 read online archive fr Huftier 2003 Arnaud Huftier Deliquescence et deplacement du merveilleux scientifique dans l entre deux guerres Maurice Renard Andre Couvreur et Rosny aine in Arnaud Huftier dir La Belgique un jeu de cartes Valenciennes Presses universitaires de Valenciennes coll Lez Valenciennes no 33 2003 304 p ISBN 978 2 905725 57 8 p 75 132 fr Hummel 2017 Clement Hummel Rosny aine et le fantasme de l age d or de l anticipation francaise Academia edu 2017 p 24 read online archive fr Lanuque 2015 Jean Guillaume Lanuque Le retour du refoule Sur le renouveau du merveilleux scientifique in Jean Guillaume Lanuque dir Dimension Merveilleux scientifique Encino Calif Black Coat Press coll Riviere Blanche 2015 ISBN 978 1 61227 438 6 p 359 377 fr Lanuque 2018 Jean Guillaume Lanuque La bande dessinee avenir du merveilleux scientifique in Jean Guillaume Lanuque dir Dimension Merveilleux scientifique 4 Encino Calif Black Coat Press coll Riviere Blanche 2018 ISBN 978 1 61227 749 3 p 287 302 fr Lehman 2006 Serge Lehman Hypermondes perdus in Chasseurs de chimeres l age d or de la science fiction francaise Paris Omnibus 2006 ISBN 978 2 258 07048 6 p I XXV fr Marron 2018 Mathilde Marron Universite de l Imaginaire Fleur Hopkins et Les Invisibles archive in ActuSF 12 april 2018 fr Musnik 2019 Roger Musnik De Jules Verne a Maurice Renard les precurseurs archive in the Gallica blog 4 june 2019 accessed 22 june 2020 Novel Le Merveilleux scientifique selon Maurice Renard edit fr Chabot 2018 Hugues Chabot Merveilleux scientifique et merveilleux logique chez Maurice Renard une epistemologie romancee ReS Futurae vol 11 2018 DOI https doi org 10 4000 resf 1278 read online archive fr Evans 2018b Arthur B Evans La science fiction fantastique de Maurice Renard ReS Futurae vol 11 2018 DOI https doi org 10 4000 resf 1439 read online archive fr Hopkins 2018b Fleur Hopkins Ecrire un conte a structure savante apparition metamorphoses et declin du recit merveilleux scientifique dans l œuvre de Maurice Renard 1909 1931 ReS Futurae vol 11 2018 DOI https doi org 10 4000 resf 1296 read online archive fr Pezard 2018a Emilie Pezard Defense et illustration d un genre Le merveilleux scientifique defini par Maurice Renard 1909 1928 ReS Futurae vol 11 2018 DOI https doi org 10 4000 resf 1383 read online archive fr Pezard 2018b Emilie Pezard L ombre de la merveille Le merveilleux scientifique au second degre de Maurice Renard ReS Futurae vol 11 2018 DOI https doi org 10 4000 resf 1312 read online archive fr Van Herp 1956 Jacques Van Herp Maurice Renard scribe de miracles Fiction OPTA no 28 march 1956 p 107 110 External links edit Le Merveilleux scientifique Une science fiction a la francaise Bibliographie selective archive at bnf fr April 2019 accessed July 30 2020 in French Selective bibliography of studies and novels relating to the scientific marvelous genre NooSFere archive in French Online encyclopedia of science fiction Jean Luc Boutel Sur l autre face du monde archive in French Blog devoted to the scientific marvelous Philippe Ethuin ArcheoSF archive in French Site devoted to reviews of early science fiction Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scientific marvelous amp oldid 1206129027, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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