Marleen Barr
Born (1953-03-01) March 1, 1953
AwardsPilgrim Award, Science Fiction Research Association (1997)
Academic work
InstitutionsFordham University, New York City
Main interestsCommunication and media studies, particularly science fiction studies
Notable ideasFeminist science fiction criticism

Marleen S. Barr teaches communication and media studies at Fordham University, New York City. She is notable for her significant contributions to science fiction studies, for which she won a Pilgrim Award from the Science Fiction Research Association in 1997.[1] Her primary contributions have been her foundational work in the field of feminist science fiction criticism;[2] her 1981 anthology Future Females: A Critical Anthology "served as an introduction and eye-opener to the field of Feminist Science Fiction."[3]

Biography

Marleen Sandra Barr was born on March 1, 1953, in New York City, New York.[4] She attended University of Michigan in 1975, where she received her master's degree and State University of New York-Buffalo in 1979, receiving her Phd.[5]

Selected bibliography

Original criticism

Edited works of criticism

  • Future Females: A Critical Anthology (1981) (editor)
  • Future Females, The Next Generation: New Voices and Velocities in Feminist Science Fiction Criticism (2000) (editor)
  • Envisioning the Future: Science Fiction and the Next Millennium (2003) (editor)
  • Reading Science Fiction (2009) (co-editor, with James Gunn and Matthew Candelaria)

Fiction

Short fiction

  • Superfeminist: or, A Hanukah Carol (2003)
  • Close Encounters of the Monica Kind (2004)
  • Rudolph the Red Nosed Squirrel or Miracle on 82nd Street: Fiction/Quotation/Exposition (2015)
  • The Perfect Storm, or Why Americans Are No Longer Afraid of Dragons (2017)
  • Duck, Donald: A Trump Exorcism (2017)
  • The Purple Rose of Brooklyn, or Meeting Marshall McLuhan (with a Little Help from Mayan Apocalypse Planet X/Nibiru) (2017)
  • The Trump Brand (2017)

Awards

References

  1. The Locus Index to SF Awards, Science Fiction Research Association Awards Archived 2007-04-12 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. See, e.g., C. Jason Smith & Ximena Gallardo C., "Oy Science Fiction", Reconstruction v.5, n.4 (Fall 2005) ("Marleen S. Barr is a pioneer of feminist science fiction criticism"); Inez van der Spek, Alien Plots, p.42; David Seed, A Companion to Science Fiction, p.52; etc.
  3. Lorie Sauble-Otto, "Review of Barr, Future Females", Rocky Mountain Review (Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association), v.57, n.2 (Fall 2003).
  4. "Marleen S. Barr". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 2023-04-28.
  5. "Marleen Barr – BMCC". Retrieved 2023-04-28.
  6. Bagwell, Erin; Barr, Marleen (5 March 2018). "Feminist Science Fiction W/ Marleen S. Barr". Publications and Research.
  7. "Science Fiction Scholar Receives Fulbright Archived 2007-07-15 at the Wayback Machine," Oct. 10, 2006, Fordham In Focus: Faculty and Research.


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