When the topic comes up I like to point out Heinlein was writing StrangerInAStrangeLand , a book some called “The Hippie Bible”, at the SAME TIME he was writing Starship Troopers.

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    What’s going on here?

    Is this a bot thing that reposts not just the post but all the comments here?

    I thought I was going to get to point out again that Starship Troopers was a satire of a military government that while most civilians didn’t pick up on, other military officers did.

    Stranger had a lot of the same themes, it was just one was written for civilians and one for the military. Heinlein was a military officer and understood how they thing, how they disagreed with a progressive message, and what path to take them down to make them up to the progressive message later.

    Note to the mention the always applicable:

    If something was progressive 50 years ago and seems conservative now, it’s because we achieved progress.

    We shot higher than Heinlein predicted, and dude was pretty fucking good at predicting stuff. That’s something we should be proud of now, not use to invalidate Heinleins earlier message wholesale.

    • MathiasTCK@lemmy.worldOPM
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      3 months ago

      In discussions on this topic people frequently want to use one book, or another, as expressing the views of the author at some period of time. That fails here because two books with seemingly opposing views were written by the same author at the same time.

      • MathiasTCK@lemmy.worldOPM
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        3 months ago

        My take is Heinlein was a professional SciFi author, he wrote what he thought would sell, but given that: he was happy to conduct thought experiments meant to examine positions he may or may not have agreed with, considered, or actively opposed. That said, I think he also often had a self insert character that basically expressed Heinlein’s take.

        I point people at the Notebook of Lazarus Long if they want Heinlein’s take expressed via fiction.

  • Pronell@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    The first several pages of Starship Troopers tell us exactly what’s going in before we jump into the view of the teenager absorbing propaganda.

    Heinlein completely understood what he was writing. His audience didn’t really catch the propaganda though until the movie force-fed it to them.

    Great post.

    • MathiasTCK@lemmy.worldOPM
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      3 months ago

      I meant original post to link to the threads.net post, but I’ve had this conversation several times.

      This community started as a subreddit, dedicated to Starship Troopers Gifs. I never promoted it as such though, and basically used it as a place to bookmark. But I’ll still post Starship Troopers and Heinlein stuff here, or any time someone is Doing Their Part.