I have to thank Coursera for forcing me to step outside of my literary comfort zone, and, explore the legacy of science fiction in Western literature.This has expanded my understanding of speculative fiction, and I believe this will make me a better writer. I suggest we all take advantage of Coursera (and perhaps create our own on-line courses).
I discovered the book Little Brother by Cory Doctorow online at Coursera. This was a fantastic read even though it was Young Adult (YA) and Black people were not the central focus. It still is a good book. Black people need to read it. The author offers a tale of San Francisco teenagers who battle a corrupt U.S. government that illegally has kidnapped and tortured American citizens after a terrorist bombing. I am reading the sequel, Homeland, now. (Both books are available free on the Internet).
According to the website, Coursera is a social entrepreneurship collective that partners with the top universities around the world to offer courses online for anyone to take, for free. They envision a future where the top universities are educating not only thousands of students, but millions. Talented professors teach tens or hundreds of thousands of students.
The Fantasy and Science Fiction: The Human Mind, Our Modern World started January 22, 2013, and ended on April 9, 2013 (another course begins soon). We read books and short stories. I delved into the fantasy, fairy tale, and science fiction of many different authors from the 1800s to present day. There was a lot of discussion among people in different nations, who spoke different languages and had various cultural backgrounds.
The course required that students submit reviews of their readings as well as analyze what other students had written. Each week, I reviewed five essays and received up to five reviews of what I had written. The rating scale was from 1 (the lowest ranking) to 3 (the most highly regarded). I never got a 6, but I receive many positive and helpful comments about my writing.
Our teacher was Eric S. Rabkin. Each week after we submitted our essays and reviews of our fellow students, Rabkin posted short video lectures about the works we had just read. Each video was a lesson about a specific aspect of our reading. This was enlightening and encouraging for anyone considering writing sci-fi for a living.
I had the pleasure of discovering the original Frankenstein, Dracula, Invisible Man, John Carter of Mars and others. I was immersed in great (and not so great) literature written by masters of the art. We were told that to be a good writer, you have to be a voracious reader.
Also in the course, I was happy to see that speculative fiction is a global event. It involves many different aspects of what the future could be. African, Asian, European and other ethnic/geographic writers have their own views of the future and how we all will play a role in it. According to the New York Times, "Massive Open Online Courses (MOOC) are often free, non-degree programs that have been drawing top professors. Some courses may attract nearly a 100,000 participants."
Your classmates could become your best customers.
Links to my essays and peer reviewers from Coursera can be found at staffordbattle.com
The course starts again in July. It is free and you may learn something that helps you to sell better books.
Peace out!
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