Now I'm interested in the connection between genre and popularity.
A recurrent theme in my data is that fantasy is more accessible to readers than science fiction, therefore it is more popular (in the sense of "more people like it"). There are various variations of this theme, e.g. saying that in science fiction, the "science" element acts as a "
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Also, even if many people hear fairytales when they're little (parents, teachers, other adults, TV), most lose interest as they grow up, others, on the other hand, develop that interest in various directions, one of them being fantasy.
Personally, I think my own interest in SF&F started not so much from fairytales (although tales from Narnia and The Hobbit were among my favourites, and I do recall hearing them told by my mum as well) as from fascination with the starry sky and a dream to some time fly up there in a spaceship or something:)
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Star Wars is not SF! :)
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O šiaip geras SF apibrėžimas yra Andy Sawyer: "A library of science fiction is a library of Babel: a collection of fictions classified as ‘science fiction’ because someone, somewhere has decided that they reflect, somehow, one of the many definitions of sf" :)
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Walter Jon Williams. I think there's an ideological difference between science fiction and fantasy. In Tolkien's "On fairy tales" he discussed a eucatastrophe, which we would call "a happy ending". Even when the quest has failed and Frodo has taken the ring for his own, and the Dark Lord has found out that the ring is right here, and reaches for it, Gollum interferes and saves the day. And then Frodo and Sam are stuck on the Mount Orodruin ( ... )
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