Just got to thinking about this after those threads on The Expanse and Military Sci-Fi (which admittedly is probably the sub-genre least affected by this trend).
I know the case can be made for the existence of some conservative authors or sometimes conservative themes, of course they exist, but are they “swimming upstream” so-to-speak? Going against the flow of “the mainstream” of Sci-Fi?
I’m not looking for a list of conservative authors by the way, I want to hear if the people here think that Sci-Fi as a genre may or may not have an inherent bias towards the new, the previously unseen, and thus “progressive” ideas and ideologies. Not even necessarily to castigate Sci-Fi, merely to attempt to understand what’s happening.
The “Sad Puppies” folks probably have some insights on this subject but I don’t know much about them beyond their existence and their claim that the Sci-Fi book awards system has been subverted by leftist/progressive ideologues:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sad_Puppies
Sad Puppies activists accused the Hugo Awards "of giving awards on the basis of political correctness and favoring authors and artists who aren't straight, white and male".
I do see the ideas of sci-if and “progressivism” as connected, but I’m not sure if that’s an inherent aspect of the genre, or if that is perhaps a cultural relic. I lean towards the idea that it is likely largely cultural (i.e. well respected sci-fi authors of old put “culturally progressive” themes in their books about Scientific “progress”, and that has carried on to this day) but I’m interested in where everyone else falls on the subject.
Kind of a tangent:
I feel like we create art in an attempt to share what we feel, with other people
If we feel like existence is glorious and blessed, we will attempt to fashion that feeling into a piece of art to express it, and hopefully spread it
If we feel like existence is a weary drudge from cradle to grave in a meaningless world of random chance and indifference (“God is dead, and we have killed him.”), then unfortunately that too ends up being expressed, and shared, and eventually violently enforced like we see today.
We’re all here because on one subject or another we refused to sink down into the mire of their (D)illusions. How do we turn that into a legend? It’s kind of happening unconsciously, but I don’t know if that’s enough, know what I mean?