French science fiction
French science fiction is a substantial genre of French literature. It remains an active and productive genre which has evolved in conjunction with anglophone science fiction and other French and international literature.
History
Proto science fiction before Jules Verne
As far back as the 17th century, space exploration and aliens can be found in Cyrano de Bergerac's Comical History of the States and Empires of the Moon and Bernard Le Bovier de Fontenelle's Entretien sur la Pluralité des Mondes. Voltaire's 1752 short stories Micromégas and Plato's Dream are particularly prophetic of the future of science fiction.Also worthy of note are Simon Tyssot de Patot's Voyages et Aventures de Jacques Massé, which features a Lost World, La Vie, Les Aventures et Le Voyage de Groenland du Révérend Père Cordelier Pierre de Mésange, which features a Hollow Earth, Louis-Sébastien Mercier's L'An 2440, which depicts a future France, and Nicolas-Edmé Restif de la Bretonne's La Découverte Australe par un Homme Volant notorious for his prophetic inventions.
Other notable proto-science fiction authors and works of the 18th and 19th century include:
- Jean-Baptiste Cousin de Grainville's Le Dernier Homme about the Last Man on Earth.
- Historian Félix Bodin's Le Roman de l'Avenir and Emile Souvestre's Le Monde Tel Qu'il Sera, two novels which try to predict what the next century will be like.
- Louis Geoffroy's Napoleon et la Conquête du Monde, an alternate history of a world conquered by Napoleon.
- C.I. Defontenay's Star ou Psi de Cassiopée, an Olaf Stapledon-like chronicle of an alien world and civilization.
- Astronomer Camille Flammarion's La Pluralité des Mondes Habités which speculated on extraterrestrial life.
- Henri de Parville's An Inhabitant of the Planet Mars. Originally a hoax in the French newspaper Le Pays in 1864, about a Colorado oil prospector which find a meteorite with a mummy inside that is believed to come from Mars, it was picked up by Jules Verne's publisher who released it in an expanded book version in 1865.
- Achille Eyraud's Voyage to Venus, a story about humans who travel to Venus in an interplanetary rocket-powered spaceship, where they meet an utopian society.
After Jules Verne
The first few decades of French science fiction produced several renowned names of literature. Not only Jules Verne, but also:- Louis Boussenard, a successor of Verne.
- Didier de Chousy, who wrote Ignis, a novel where an inventor tries to tap the energy from the centre of the earth in a dystopian society dominated by technology.
- Charles Derennes, who wrote novels like Le peuple du pole , where explorers finds a secret alien society of technologically-advanced reptilian humanoids who have evolved in isolation from the rest of the world for millions of years.
- Arnould Galopin, creator of Doctor Omega.
- Jean de La Hire, creator of Nyctalope
- Paul d'Ivoi, author of the Vernian Voyages Excentriques and creator of Pulp heroes Lavarède and Docteur Mystère.
- André Laurie, another successor of Verne.
- John Antoine Nau, who won the first Prix Goncourt in 1903 for his science fiction novel Enemy Force.
- Georges Le Faure & Henri de Graffigny, who sent their heroes explore the Solar System in Les Aventures Extraordinaires d'un Savant Russe
- Gustave Le Rouge, author of Le Prisonnier de la Planète Mars and Le Mystérieux Docteur Cornélius.
- Albert Robida, a writer and an artist, arguably the "father" of science fiction illustration.
- Maurice Renard, a Wellsian writer, author of Le Docteur Lerne, Le Péril Bleu and Les Mains d'Orlac
- J.-H. Rosny aîné, born in Belgium, the father of "modern" French science fiction, a writer also comparable to H. G. Wells, who wrote the classic Les Xipehuz and La Mort de la Terre.
- Auguste Villiers de l'Isle-Adam, author of L'Ève future
World War I brought an end to this early period. Where the rapid development of science and technology during the late 19th century motivated the optimistic works of these early science fiction authors, the horrors of industrialised warfare and specifically the application of advanced technologies in such a destructive manner made many French authors more pessimistic about the potential of technological development.
Between the two world wars, Rosny aîné published his masterpiece Les Navigateurs de l'Infini, in which he invented the word "astronautique". There were a few notable new authors during the period:
- Régis Messac, for Quinzinzinzili.
- José Moselli, for La fin d'Illa.
- Jacques Spitz, for La guerre des mouches.
- René Thévenin for Chasseurs d'Hommes and Sur l'Autre Face du Monde, the latter under a pseudonym.
After World War II
This period of decrease of French science fiction is known to many as a "golden age" of English-language and particularly American science fiction. When French science fiction began reappearing strongly after World War II, it was the themes and styles of Anglophone science fiction which served as an inspiration for new works. The first genre magazine, Fiction – at first a translation of the American Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction – began appearing in 1953.
The major genre imprint of the 1950s and '60s publishing translations of American novels was Le Rayon Fantastique published by Hachette and Gallimard, and edited by George Gallet and Stephen Spriel. Nevertheless, Le Rayon Fantastique helped begin the careers of a number of native authors:
- Francis Carsac
- Philippe Curval
- Daniel Drode
- Michel Jeury
- Gérard Klein
- Nathalie Henneberg
- Pierre Barbet
- Richard Bessière
- B.-R. Bruss
- André Caroff
- Jimmy Guieu
- Gérard Klein
- Maurice Limat
- André Ruellan
- Louis Thirion
- Stefan Wul
- René Barjavel
Another series, Présence du Futur, was initiated during 1954 by publisher Denoël. Among its authors were:
- Jean-Pierre Andrevon
- Jean-Louis Curtis
- Gérard Klein
- Jacques Sternberg
- Jacques Vallee
Unlike American science fiction, space travel was not the major theme for the post-1968 French authors. A new generation of French writers, who had few memories of the horrors of the past two generations, were inspired by the transformation of France during the post-war era. Especially after May 1968, French SF authors wrote about political and social themes in their works. Authors like Michel Jeury, Jean-Pierre Andrevon and Philippe Curval began to attract acclaim for their redevelopment of a genre which, at the time, was still considered primarily a juvenile entertainment.
During the 1970s, comics began to be important for French SF. Métal hurlant—the French magazine that "spun off" the American magazine Heavy Metal – began developing the possibilities of science fiction as a source for comics. Graphic novels are now a major— if not the major— outlet for French science fiction production today.
During the 1980s, French authors began to consider science fiction as appropriate for experimental literature. The influence of postmodernism on literature and the development of cyberpunk themes catalysed a new body of French SF, near the end of the decade: the so-called "Lost Generation"
At present, French SF is particularly well represented by graphic novels, and a number of titles are printed annually. As in most of the developed world, magazine culture has decreased dramatically because of the internet, but a number of French SF magazines remain in print, including Bifrost, Galaxies and Solaris. Despite the space opera revival of the beginning of the 1990s the influence from English language science fiction and movies has diminished considerably since the "Lost Generation", while the influence of animation, video games and other international science fiction traditions has increased. The influence of Japanese manga and anime has also been particularly noticeable during recent years for graphic formats.
Other notable French science fiction authors, post-World War II
- G.-J. Arnaud
- Ayerdhal
- Pierre Bordage
- Serge Brussolo
- Richard Canal
- Maurice G. Dantec
- Michel Demuth
- Sylvie Denis
- Thierry Di Rollo
- Dominique Douay
- Catherine Dufour
- Jean-Claude Dunyach
- Claude Ecken
- Jean-Pierre Fontana
- Yves Fremion
- Laurent Genefort
- Philippe Goy
- Johan Héliot
- Joël Houssin
- Emmanuel Jouanne
- Serge Lehman
- Jean-Marc Ligny
- Xavier Mauméjean
- Michel Pagel
- Pierre Pelot
- Julia Verlanger
- Élisabeth Vonarburg
- Roland C. Wagner
- Daniel Walther
- Bernard Werber
- Joëlle Wintrebert
Literary awards
Other Awards for French-language science fiction include or have includes the Prix Apollo, the Prix Bob Morane, the Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire, the Prix Julia Verlanger, the Prix Jules Verne, the Prix Ozone and the Prix Tour Eiffel.