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Mars in culture
Writers were pushed to create fantastic works about Mars by the discussions of scientists that began at the end of the XIX century about the possibility that there is not just life on the surface of Mars, but a developed civilization.
At this time, for example, the famous novel by G. Wells "The War of the Worlds" was created, in which the Martians tried to leave their dying planet to conquer the Earth.
In 1938, in the United States, the radio version of this work was presented in the form of a news radio broadcast, which caused a mass panic when many listeners mistakenly mistook this "report" for the truth.
In 1966, the writers Arkady and Boris Strugatsky wrote a satirical "continuation" of the "War of the Worlds "called" The Second Invasion of the Martians".
An illustration of a Martian tripod from the 1906 French edition of The War of the Worlds
Among the important works about Mars, it is also worth noting Ray Bradbury's novel "The Martian Chronicles", published in 1950, consisting of separate loosely related short stories, as well as a number of stories adjacent to this cycle; the novel tells about the stages of human exploration of Mars and contacts with the dying ancient Martian civilization.
In 1917-1964, eleven books about Barsoom were published.
This was the name of the planet Mars in the fantasy world created by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
In this work, the planet was presented as a dying one, whose inhabitants are in a continuous war of everyone with everyone for scarce natural resources.
In 1938, C. Lewis wrote the novel "From the silent Planet".
It is noteworthy that in his novel Gulliver's Travels, Jonathan Swift mentioned two moons of Mars 150 years before they were actually discovered.
Content
1 Literary works about Mars and Martians 2 Music 3 Movies 4 Video Games 5 Astrology 6 Other 7 Notes 8 Literature
Literary works about Mars and Martians
Ilya Chashnik.
A red circle on a black surface.
1925
H. G. Wells "The War of the Worlds" (1897) Kurt Lasswitz "On two planets" (1897) Porfiry Infatiev "On another Planet" (1901) Alexander Bogdanov "Red Star" (1908) Edgar Burroughs A series of novels about Barsoom (1917-1964) A. N. Tolstoy "Aelita" (novel, 1923) Nikolai Mukhanov "Flaming Abysses" (1924) Lao She "Notes about the cat City" (1932) A. N. Tolstoy "Aelita" (novel, 1937) Robert Heinlein "The Red Planet" (1948) Ray Bradbury "The Martian Chronicles" (1950) Arthur Clarke "The Sands of Mars" (1951) Georgy Martynov "220 days on a spaceship" (1955) Boris Lyapunov "We are on Mars" (1955) Robert Sheckley "The Hare" (1955) Robert Heinlein "Double Star" (1956) Kurt Vonnegut "Sirens of Titan" (1959) Robert Heinlein "A Stranger in a Strange Country" (1961) Konstantin Volkov "Mars Awakens" (1961) Vladimir Shitik "The Last Orbit" (1962) Vladimir Mikhailov "Special Necessity" (1963)
Alexander Shalimov "The Price of Immortality" (1970) Sergey Zhemaitis "The Crimson Planet" (1973) Alexander Kazantsev "Faetians" (1974) Graham McNeill "Mechanicum" (2011)
Music
"Life on Mars?" - compositions by David Bowie.
"Deserts of Mars" is a song by La Bionda.
"Mars Meets Venus" is a song by Duran Duran from the album Pop Trash.
The album of the Barn of 2007 is called "The first rapper on Mars".
The journey to Mars is described in the song of the same name.
The song Noize MC "It's cool on Mars".
One of the Wings 'albums is called " Venus and Mars"("Venus and Mars").
Its cover depicts these two planets.
Rock band Thirty Seconds to Mars and its debut album 30 Seconds to Mars.
Films
In the period from 1903 to our time, more than 80 films were released about Mars — feature films, documentaries, animated films.
1980 The Martian Chronicles.
2006 Life on Mars (English: Life on Mars) is a British science fiction detective television series.
Video games
In the video game Martian Gothic: Unification, the place of action is Mars, the events develop at the foot of the Olympus volcano.
In the Doom video game series, the action takes place on Mars and its two moons, Phobos and Deimos.
In the video games of the Red Faction series (Red Faction (1), Red Faction: Guerilla (3), Red Faction: Armageddon (4)) and the video games Mars: War Logs, etc., the "Red Planet"is also the place of action.
In the universe of the game Space Station 13, Mars had the role of the first planet of the Earth colony and the place of sending the first expeditions to "deep space".
Astrology
In astrology, Mars is the planet that controls Aries, the sign of the zodiac[4].
Also, before the discovery of Pluto, it was believed that Mars controls Scorpio.
Mars is associated with such qualities as self affirmation, aggression, sexuality, energy and impulsivity[4].
Mars, according to astrologers, controls sports, competitions and physical activity in general.
In medical astrology, Mars is responsible for the state of the genitals[4], the adrenal glands.
In occultism, Mars is correlated with the Sefira of Gwur. (See also the Chaldean series)
[5].
Other
In the fictional Warhammer 40,000 universe, Mars is the world capital of the Adeptus Mechanicus organization, which supports the scientific and technical thought of the Imperium of Humanity.
In the Mass Effect universe, a database of long disappeared aliens was found at the south pole of Mars, the decoding of which allowed people to go out into the Galaxy.
Notesreferences
↑ Sagan Carl.
Cosmos.
— New York, USA: Random House, 1980.
— P. 107.
— ISBN 0394502949.
↑ Lubertozzi, Alex; Holmsten, Brian.
The war of the worlds: Mars' invasion of earth, inciting panic and inspiring terror from H.G. Wells to Orson Welles and beyond.
— Sourcebooks, Inc., 2003.
— P. 3–31.
— ISBN 1570719853.
↑ Darling, David Swift, Jonathan and the moons of Mars.
Verified on March 1, 2007.
Archived from the original source on August 21, 2011.
↑ 1 2 3 The influence of planets: Mars.
Checked on March 27, 2011.
Archived from the original source on August 21, 2011.
Рег Regardi I. Chapter three.
Sephiroth / / Pomegranate Garden.
- Moscow: Enigma, 2005.
- 304 p.
— ISBN 5-94698-044-0.
Literature
Mars article from The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction Pavel Gremlev All the faces of the God of War.
Who and how colonized Mars / / World of fiction.
- May 2010.
- No.
81. Brian Stableford.
Mars // Science Fact and Science Fiction.
An Encyclopedia.
— Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2006.
— P. 281-284.
— 758 p.
— ISBN 0-415-97460-7.
Astronomical objects in science fiction Solar system [en] Mercury · Venus · Earth [en] · (Moon) * Mars · (Moons of Mars[en]) * Ceres[en] · Asteroids [en] · Jupiter · (Io * Europa · Ganymede · Callisto) * Saturn · (Titan · other moons) · Uranus · Neptune · Pluto · Other trans Neptunian objects · Comets · Fictional planets of the Solar System[en]
Stars and planetary systems Aldebaran · Alpha Centauri · Altair * Betelgeuse * Deneb · Epsilon Eridani · Rigel · Sirius · Tau Ceti · Vega · Black Holes · Nebulae · Galaxies
See also: Category:Fictional planets
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