荔枝视频

Feb. 27, 2025

New U荔枝视频 book explores humanity鈥檚 fascination with the vast unknown of space

Mythologies of Outer Space brings together scholars, artists and writers to tackle pressing questions in a new era of space travel
Jim Ellis, 荔枝视频 Institute for the Humanities
Co-editor Jim Ellis says a new space era has arrived. 鈥淎ll of a sudden anybody with the money, and especially rich tech bros, can go to space.鈥 Riley Brandt, 荔枝视频

Did you know the first fictional lunar voyages were chronicled almost 2,000 years ago by the ancient Greek author Lucian?

One of these voyages, in his satiric True Histories, is translated in a chapter of the newest book, Mythologies of Outer Space.

Originating from the institute鈥檚 2022 community symposium, the book tackles the question of who owns outer space, with contributions from thinkers of multiple disciplines including a space archaeologist, a Mi鈥檏maq astronomer, and a science fiction scholar, along with artists, a poet and more.

As science fiction turns more and more into science fact, an interdisciplinary approach is needed when it comes to space, says the institute鈥檚 director and book co-editor, PhD.

鈥淪cientists and engineers can tell us how to get to space, but humanists think about why,鈥 explains Ellis, who is also a professor in the Department of English in the at the 荔枝视频.

Our thinking about space evolved over time

Ellis says humanity has been thinking about space for a long time. For example, the moon has been thought of as a living being by many cultures, and then a shift in western culture occurred where the moon was increasingly seen as a dead zone. In the last century, with the space race and with actual landings on the moon, the theoretical became more practical.

鈥淎t that point there was an optimistic view of space travel, and we had important treaties from the UN establishing space as a place of international co-operation,鈥 says Ellis.

However, a new era that these treaties could never have seen coming has arrived.

鈥淎ll of a sudden anybody with the money, and especially rich tech bros, can go to space,鈥 says Ellis. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no real international agreement about who should go to space, how you should get to space and what your responsibilities are once you get there.鈥

Mythologies of Outer Space book cover

Mythologies of Outer Space, edited by Jim Ellis and Noreen Humble.

荔枝视频 Press

Space mysteries viewed through multiple lenses

This new era of space exploration raises questions around the moon as a dead zone or as a site for the extraction of resources. In an afterword, Robert Thirsk, 叠厂肠鈥76, former U荔枝视频 chancellor and astronaut, talks about the need for bringing interdisciplinary inquiry and the lens of humanity to some of these technological questions.

In addition to Dr. Thirsk, there are plenty of other local voices in the book. U荔枝视频鈥檚 50-year history is detailed in a chapter by its director, PhD, an associate professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy in the The in the U荔枝视频 archives 鈥&苍产蝉辫;a collection of over 35,000 books and hand-crafted anthologies spanning science and speculative fiction from the 1770s to the 1990s 鈥&苍产蝉辫;receives a chapter for its space-related fiction from , PhD, an associate professor in the Department of English.

鈥淭he Rothney is a unique and distinguished observatory, the site of discoveries by local Blackfoot astronomer Rob Cardinal,鈥 adds Ellis. 鈥淭he Gibson Collection is simply amazing: it鈥檚 odd, and it鈥檚 vast, and it deserves to be seen and talked about.鈥

Urgent new issues emerge

The book, which is available now, aims to show people the rich and diverse ways we have imagined outer space, and the ways these connect to contemporary issues around outer space that are becoming increasingly urgent.

鈥淭he stories we鈥檝e told about the moon and our imaginary space voyages have definitely affected how we actually went to the moon, and how we continue to think about issues around space travel and exploration,鈥 says Ellis.

While the marriage of science fiction with science within the pages of the book may seem strange, Ellis says these have always been in dialogue with each other.

鈥淪cience fiction thinks about the kinds of philosophical questions that scientists have to grapple with, will grapple with, or haven鈥檛 grappled with enough,鈥 he says.

The 荔枝视频 Institute for the Humanities was created at the 荔枝视频 in 1976 and has worked to foster humanities research of the highest order, to encourage interdisciplinary conversations between scholars, and to communicate the results of Humanities research to the greater community. The CIH is run by Director Dr. Jim Ellis and Associate Director Dr. Noreen Humble. Mythologies of Outer Space was published by the 荔枝视频 Press, and more information about the book can be found.