Space and the ocean share a lot of similarities. Both space and the ocean present abundant opportunity for human exploration and discovery. To prepare for space travel, NASA’s NEEMO simulation requires astronauts to live underwater for a several days. While, the universe is more vast and unintelligible than our ocean, the planets of our solar system have been mapped with higher resolution the sea floor. Fixated on pushing the limits of impossibility, we consistently look to space rather than investigating what remains undiscovered on earth. NOAA has an annual budget of 5 billion dollars, while NASA’s stands at nearly 23 billion as of 2020. Space travel may even be a barrier to deep sea exploration. While SF’s fascination with space has possibly contributed to the neglect of earthly exploration, the genre has had many love affairs with the sea. Giving more attention to underwater SF may help push sea exploration deeper into our collective unconscious. It could be the Marina Trench, not Mars, that holds the hospitable potential for holding future human populations. I found this link (https://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/under_the_sea) on The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. If you are interested in underwater SF, check out their list; it is expansive. The ocean deserves some love!
2 thoughts on “Underwater SF”
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Jimi Hendrix would certainly agree! It would be quite amazing if humans returned to the sea soup from which we originated. I wonder if one reason we aren’t looking into underwater living more is that the idea of “going backwards” is difficult for people, while going outward and forward preferable. But perhaps going outward is also a kind of return, as we are made of “star stuff” (as well as water). Great thoughts, River!
I’m sure that the 20th century Space Race and now the privatization of space travel contributed/is contributing to the push to explore space over the oceans. Plus, the age of ocean exploration in the past was more of using the oceans as a way to “explore”/colonize other landmasses.
As far as the list of sf works, thanks for sharing! I hadn’t considered underwater sf before.