Retro-futurism

From Freepedia

Retro-futurism describes the return to the fanciful depictions of the future produced many years ago by popular futurology. These may be based on a lack of scientific knowledge and a great deal of imagination and speculation.

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In literature

The setting of retro-futuristic stories is usually a utopian society; its spirit of optimism and embracing of the status-quo is a complete contrast with cyberpunk. Retro-futurism is also different from steampunk, although the two had things in common in the late 19th and early 20th centuries when modern technology was still young.

Film and Literature

In design and arts

A great deal of attention is drawn to fantastic machines, buildings, cities, and transportation systems, the logistics of which are often impractical. The retro-futuristic design ethic tends to solid colors, streamlined shapes, and mammoth scales. It might be said that retro-futurism is the ultimate development of googie design.

Artists who have worked with a retro-futuristic style

In architecture

Retro-futurism has appeared in some examples of postmodern architecture. In the example seen at right, the upper portion of the building is not intended to be integrated with the building but rather to appear as a separate object - a huge flying saucer-like space ship only incidentally attached to a conventional building. This appears intended not to evoke an even remotely possible future, but rather a past imagination of that future - perhaps as seen in the science fiction movies of the 1950s or the pulp novels and comics of the 1930s.

Books on Retro-futurism

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