Looking at a television franchise like Battlestar Galactica (BSG) is no longer news within the discipline of International Relations. A growing number of scholars in and out of IR are studying the importance of cultural artifacts – popular or otherwise – for the phenomena that make up the core of our discipline. The genre of science fiction offers the analyst an opportunity that cannot be matched by more mimetic genres, namely the chance to look at how sets of widely-circulating expectations of the social serve to constrain authors as they work to introduce as yet unexplored problematiques, the fantasy aspect in much of science fiction storytelling is premised simply on a material difference. As such, while the physical setting of a science...
Among all the science fiction (SF) and fantasy sagas ever released, Star Wars has a very special pla...
The subject of Agnieszka Urbańczyk’s monograph is fan reception of political content in works of sci...
Mainstream international relations scholars often ignore the importance of actors other than the sta...
Battlestar Galactica represents a deliberately fantasized world but this, of course, does not mean t...
This article examines the science fiction television series Battlestar Galactica (2003–9) as a compl...
The nuclear age has been characterized by an emerging and now well-established norm of nuclear non-u...
International audienceThis paper deals with the way the science fiction series Battlestar Galactica ...
Conferencias y Comunicaciones del primer Congreso Internacional de literatura fantástica y ciencia f...
Popular culture can be used as a mirror to reflect on how societies think about themselves. Here Sta...
This essay reads the re-made Battlestar Galactica series—-a 21st-century Frankenstein—-according to ...
This thesis explores the extent to which science fiction conveys latent sociocultural attitudes abou...
The “facts” of international politics constitute the first-order representations of political life a...
In this paper, I consider how Robert Heinlein\u27s Starship Troopers (1959) and Orson Scott Card\u27...
Battlestar Galactica, a television series that aired on the SyFy Channel from 2003 to 2009, tells th...
Ronald D. Moore’s “remade” version of Battlestar Galatica marks a return to a resolutely militaristi...
Among all the science fiction (SF) and fantasy sagas ever released, Star Wars has a very special pla...
The subject of Agnieszka Urbańczyk’s monograph is fan reception of political content in works of sci...
Mainstream international relations scholars often ignore the importance of actors other than the sta...
Battlestar Galactica represents a deliberately fantasized world but this, of course, does not mean t...
This article examines the science fiction television series Battlestar Galactica (2003–9) as a compl...
The nuclear age has been characterized by an emerging and now well-established norm of nuclear non-u...
International audienceThis paper deals with the way the science fiction series Battlestar Galactica ...
Conferencias y Comunicaciones del primer Congreso Internacional de literatura fantástica y ciencia f...
Popular culture can be used as a mirror to reflect on how societies think about themselves. Here Sta...
This essay reads the re-made Battlestar Galactica series—-a 21st-century Frankenstein—-according to ...
This thesis explores the extent to which science fiction conveys latent sociocultural attitudes abou...
The “facts” of international politics constitute the first-order representations of political life a...
In this paper, I consider how Robert Heinlein\u27s Starship Troopers (1959) and Orson Scott Card\u27...
Battlestar Galactica, a television series that aired on the SyFy Channel from 2003 to 2009, tells th...
Ronald D. Moore’s “remade” version of Battlestar Galatica marks a return to a resolutely militaristi...
Among all the science fiction (SF) and fantasy sagas ever released, Star Wars has a very special pla...
The subject of Agnieszka Urbańczyk’s monograph is fan reception of political content in works of sci...
Mainstream international relations scholars often ignore the importance of actors other than the sta...