Why do we need “alternative reality fiction”?
As editor for a magazine on “speculative” fiction, I happen to need one. Though,
being a self-reflective sort of person, I found myself asking why. One person ∈
our associate page discussions asked why not just call it a magazine for “fiction”?
It’s a valid argument on a philosophical level. It’s a nightmare on a practical level.
[5] Without some way to modify the term “fiction” with greater specificity, readers
will assume general fiction. Without putting some parameters on the types of
fiction we publish and review, submissions would be a nightmare. One of the
most common reasons we reject short stories for publication is simply that they
don’t meet our basic themes. They are not science fiction, fantasy, horror or
[10] historical fiction.
If umbrella terms are so objectionable, then the next step is toward the more specific. Should we
expand the scope of the genre Science Fiction and also include Fantasy, Horror and Historical?
This is certainly a difficult task. Quite frankly, though, I read all of these genres, and I’m not keen on
being ∈ the role to separate them. What makes one book science fiction, and another fantasy? What
[15] makes one book horror, and another historical? These four genres of fiction cannot so efficiently be
separated from one another. Of course, these are not the only genres that get mixed up together ∈
cross-genre works. For example, historical romances have long been a standard of the monolithic
modern romance genre.
Science fiction, fantasy, horror and historical fiction share an essential common thread – they all
[20] attract readers who seek fiction that transports them to a milieu removed from everyday life. On the
one hand, it’s an issue of setting, but more importantly, I believe, it’s an issue of approach. Readers
of these genres seek to see and writers seek to show our own world through a radically different
lens. They share an ambition to experience the eternal themes of life and humanity from new angles,
∈ new forms, impossible ∈ realistic fiction. They want their fiction to answer the question “what if”,
[25] not just the question “what is”. They want to see how human, or human-like, characters react to and
manipulate circumstances that are alien to our everyday lives.
I found my best solution to the “umbrella term” issue – the title “alternative reality fiction”. Whether all
these genres are “speculative”, we will leave that question up to you. But there is no doubt that they
all aspire to create alternative realities for readers to experience. Is this term somewhat artificial and
[30] arbitrary? Do I expect it to catch on with readers? The answer is “of course not”. I expect “science
fiction”, “fantasy” and “horror” to remain the staples of the common lexicon. What I am looking to
accomplish with the term “alternative reality fiction” is simply to acknowledge that these non-realistic
genres have more ∈ common with one another than they do with other genres. Above all, I think
the term is useful, precisely because of the most important commonality among these genres: their
readers.
S.K. Slevinski
There is a lot of controversy ∈ relation to the classification of fictional genres.
In his discussion about non-realistic genres, the author attemps to: