Lena Corazon

Flights of Fancy

Tag: steampunk

Monday Inspirations: Mini-Mashup of Steampunk Awesome

I’m spending the week prepping for the start of the school year, and having a final end-of-summer hurrah with my mom, so I’m taking a little time off from blogging this week.  To keep the steampunk vibe going for the week, however, I’m linking up some fun videos and photos.

First up are some great resources from Suzanne Lazear (who taught the steampunk writing course that I took back in July) for those interested in steampunk world-building and research.

Next, we have some amazing steampunk-themed Star Wars robots from artist Jordan Thomas (check out his work on flickr, and his robots/wine bottle stoppers available for purchase on Etsy).

Steampunk C3PO by Jordan Thomas, via Cool News

 

Steampunk Stormtrooper by Jordan Thomas, via Cool News

 

Steampunk R2D2 by Jordan Thomas, via Cool News

Steampunk is also influencing Hollywood films, including the latest reboot of Alexandre Dumas’s The Three Musketeers, co-starring Matthew Macfayden and Orlando Bloom (check the flash of the awesome airship at 1:00):

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQd3MwT2fAM]

Finally, check out this great preview of Vintage Tomorrows, an upcoming documentary on the world of steampunk. It features authors Cherie Priest and Cory Doctorow, who top every ‘steampunk must-read’ list:

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TW5trrXS1e8]

Monday Inspirations: Exploring Steampunk Technology, Part 2

Due to the untimely intervention of life, Monday Inspirations is a day late, but better late than never! Today, we continue on our journey through some of the more common technological elements of the steampunk world. In many ways, this is the semi-blind leading the blind; I’m brand-new to this genre, and this mini-series of posts doubles as much-needed research. The hope is that you’ll all learn something new (especially since it seems like I have quite a few friends curious to read more about steampunk), and that I’ll have a chance to build up my smarts and write a novel that will more or less fit the genre.

Rosie the Maid from the 1960s Cartoon, The Jetsons

This week, we’re going to take a look at robots and automatons. They are, of course, a familiar mainstay in popular culture. Even if you don’t read or watch science fiction, chance are you can name at least three or four robots from literature, film and television.  For me, the first ones that come to mind are Rosie, the mechanical maid from the 1960s cartoon, The Jetsons; R2-D2 and C-3PO from the Star Wars universe; and the super-scary Daleks from Doctor Who.

Robots are worthy of fascination and awe, for they represent one of the highest forms of human ingenuity, skill, and creativity. In many ways, they serve as a symbol of a world where technology has been harnessed to serve humans, where we can enjoy the fruits of our labor and intelligence, kick back, and enjoy greater leisure time because our mechanical maids and butlers are tackling the chores and other dirty jobs for us.

The "Steambud," designed for Toysrevil 'Steampunk Perspective' contest.

What could be better than the ability to create autonomous, intelligent beings through sheer know-how and a few well-placed mechanical bits, wires, and other such gadgetry? How many mundane tasks could we outsource if we had a fleet of automatons ready and willing to tackle them?

At the same time, robots evoke some of our deepest fears, for what happens if those autonomous machines take on a consciousness that rivals our own? Is it possible for mechanical creatures to attain a semblance of a human soul? And if so, would such an outcome break overarching codes of ethics and morality?

The possibility of such an outcome has inspired countless works of fiction and film, from Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein to the film Terminator and beyond.  Popular culture has simultaneously celebrated robots and warned us against them, giving life to the very real technological dilemmas that we face every day. We may not have robot servants clanking about our homes, but we do have countless automated devices in our lives, devices that have served to displace human workers and transform our relationship with the world around us, and with one another.

Because my interests are historical in nature, what leaped out at me during my research and reading is the fact that human conception of the robot stretches back far beyond the 19th century. According to Wikipedia, the idea of self-acting automata was well-established within the lore and mythology of various ancient cultures, including the Chinese, Greeks, and Hebrews.

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Monday Inspirations: Exploring Steampunk Technology, Part 1

With 50k of my steampunk WIP, TELL ME NO LIES, under my belt, I return to my weekly Monday Inspirations posts in order to focus on some of the central elements of the steampunk genre. As you can see from the title, I intend for this to be the introduction to a miniseries on steampunk technology, a chance for me to explore a world that I find both exciting and slightly intimidating. Luckily, I have you, dear friends, to accompany me on this journey. 😀

This is more my speed. Credit: Alwyn Ladell, via Flickr

As much as the admission pains me, I must confess that tackling anything related with technology makes me all sorts of crazy inside.  I don’t do technology, or at least anything more advanced than, say, an automatic crossbow or a horse-drawn carriage. I prefer swords to guns, magical staves to anything science-y (unless, y’know, we’re talking about some sort of alchemical process), and flesh-and-blood humans and animals to androids or clockwork creatures.  I’ve never been really intrigued by how things work — I want to press a button on my computer, or turn the key in the ignition of my car, and have it work, period. (There is a reason why I am a sociologist/writer, and not an engineer or a scientist.)

It's all about the pretty, folks. Okay, the train is cool too, I suppose. Source: RocknRollBride.com

Clearly, it wasn’t the excitement over building worlds dominated by airships or great clockwork structures that motivated me to write a steampunk novel. No, I was seduced by the aesthetics (I feel a little guilty about this). I like the 19th century. I like England. I like bustles and corsets and mini-fascinators and top hats. Granted, I also like the dark side of society that steampunk allows me to explore, particularly the social upheaval that accompanied the Industrial Revolution.

Better yet, I love the possibilities that engaging in alternate history provides. What happens if we shift our attention from the stately parlors and fancy drawing rooms of the British Empire in favor of another locale? What sorts of stories can we tell if we move beyond the dominant paradigm of the wealthy European lady or gentleman, the common protagonists of steampunk novels? This is a topic I’ll return to later on down the line, but for the moment, I will refer you all to Beyond Victoriana, a blog where such questions are tackled on a regular basis.

"Into the Far West" takes the spaghetti western, adds tropes from Chinese Wuxia, along with steampunk to break free of the dominant western European paradigm. Source: http://intothefarwest.com/

But I digress. While TELL ME NO LIES currently features a host of automatons, a rakish airship pirate, steam-powered trolleys, and one very awesome mechanical menagerie, at the moment they’re little more than wee references sprinkled in — here a robot, there a steam-powered thingie, and by the way, my main character is wearing a bustle.  See? Steampunk, right?

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Linkspam Mondays Commence!

I’ve been kicking around the idea of blogging more often than the usual Sunday/Wednesday ROW80 check-ins.  I have a rather ambitious idea for daily themed blog posts, but given my very, very short attention span and notorious inability to follow-through on my most inspired and brilliant plans, it might all fall through.  But for the moment, I dub Mondays ‘Linkspam Mondays,’ where I share interesting articles and other sparkly bits gleaned from the interwebs.  Think of me as a particularly industrious spider, hoarding glittering gems of internet goodness, for your weekly enjoyment.  😀

So what’s on the list for today?

Edwardian interiors, from the wonderful Edwardian Promenade

Edwardian Promenade, a source for all things related to the Edwardian Era, posted a useful and interesting look at the period’s interior design.  One of the details that I find particularly interesting is how the decline in domestic labor (servants, particularly those working with a family for life) contributed to the need for ‘time-saving’ technologies, particularly because it ties in with patterns that I’ve noticed in etiquette books from the 1920s.  Writers like Emily Post highlighted the “servant problem,” and proposed potential solutions for to make the lives of servant-less women easier.

“The First Cyborg Horror Story,” from io9

I saw this on my twitter feed this morning and about died.  I’m in the midst of trying to brainstorm technology and gadgetry for my steampunk tale, tell me no lies, so seeing this English ballad about a man with a mechanical arm (published in the 1830s, no less) is really fascinating to check out.  The author’s discussion of 19th century fears and preoccupations with the impact of technology is thought-provoking as well.

Improving Creativity: The Connect Brainset,” from Livia Blackburne

A look at the brain and how we can improve our creativity, which is useful not only for working on fiction, but any other endeavors that require a bendy, elastic sort of mind and the ability to engage in problem-solving (I’ve found that academic research is actually an incredibly creative endeavor, and requires many of the same skills as fiction-writing). The other 2 installments in Livia’s series on the creative mind are also really useful to check out: the Absorb and Envision mindsets.

“Writing the Killing: Managing the Threads with Scrivener,” from David Hewson

I LOVE Scrivener so very, very much.  In fact, I think it helped to rescue me from getting muddled in length word documents, and has made me a much better writer, both for fiction and my academic work (I’ve blogged about using Scrivener for academic writing here).  Anyway, author David Hewson blogged today about how he uses Scrivener to manage the different storylines in his novels.  He includes some excellent tips that I will have to utilize, especially as my WIPs grow more complex.

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