The Sixties Sci Fi Imagination: Utopia as Social DreamingMain MenuSpeculative Fiction: A Definition and an OutlineSome Characteristics of 1960s Sci Fi FictionTimeline: Social, Political, Scientific, and Literary Events of the 1960sSixties Sci Fi TelevisionSixties Sci Fi Media GalleryRobert A. Heinlein, Stranger in a Strange Land (1961)Poul Anderson, After Doomsday (1962)Brian W. Aldiss, Hothouse (1962)Samuel R. Delany, Babel-17 (1966)Arthur C. Clarke, 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)Philip K. Dick, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (1968)Concluding ThoughtsCreative Commons licenseCathy Kroll0c0427ebd621fb54b22b23c07748d7202fcfe9c8
Star Trek Original Series Intro (HQ)
12016-05-01T09:10:14-07:00Cathy Kroll0c0427ebd621fb54b22b23c07748d7202fcfe9c896221Original 60's Series Star Trek Intro and Credits.plain2016-05-01T09:10:14-07:00YouTube2007-07-23T13:05:39.000ZhdjL8WXjlGIdinadangdongCathy Kroll0c0427ebd621fb54b22b23c07748d7202fcfe9c8
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12016-05-01T08:59:31-07:00Sixties Sci Fi Television8plain2016-05-01T10:53:29-07:00Courage, technological expertise, and unbridled curiosity were hallmark themes of the original Star Trek television show created and written by Gene Roddenberry. The show aired for three seasons: from 1966 - 1969. The show posed questions about contemporary American society even as it tackled social taboos with honesty and realism.