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- ...Lawrence. "Pilgrim's Progress: Is Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., Winning His War with Machines?"''' ''CW'' [137]-61.[http://www.clockworks2.org/wiki/index.php?title=Clock814 bytes (117 words) - 23:07, 10 October 2014
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- ...tine, 1974. Coll. ''War With the Robots''. New York: Pyramid, 1962. Rpt. ''Machines that Think,'' q.v. under Anthologies. [[Category: Fiction]] Cited by Ellen M. Pedersen in her rev. of ''Machines that Think'', ''Foundation'' #38.[[Category: Fiction]]372 bytes (52 words) - 14:40, 28 September 2014
- ...ron Haskin, dir.''' USA: Paramount, '''1953'''. Based on the novel ''[[The War of the Worlds]]'' by H. G. Wells. [[Category: Drama]] ...1], which stays closer to the novel in its presentation of the Martian war machines: land-stomping tripods as opposed to the earlier film's elegant levitating904 bytes (145 words) - 02:00, 4 January 2015
- ...Far Horizons''. Robert Silverberg, ed. New York, Avon EOS, 1999. Coll. ''[[War Stories]]''. ...military mahem: in the ALSC (131 f.; § 3—& passim), identified in Forever War as an "Accelerated Life Situation Computer" ("Major Mandella" § 1). Note:817 bytes (119 words) - 18:57, 16 December 2014
- ...n faintly ridiculous mechanical nature of the actual machines used in that war. The "plethora of useless mechanisms and displaced appliances in Dada art e733 bytes (105 words) - 22:10, 27 October 2014
- ...e very important in plot, suggested by imagery of small humans, very large machines. Episode deals with questions of honor when the code of the good guys requ655 bytes (96 words) - 15:34, 12 April 2007
- ...eutral, utilized by villains and heroes, and humans inside humanoid-shaped machines.920 bytes (122 words) - 19:31, 31 July 2017
- Human masters control war machines via brain waves. (Cashes in on the TERMINATOR/ROBOCOP sub-genre [for films,242 bytes (32 words) - 18:09, 3 October 2014
- ...plus the torture of humans. Here and in "[[Matriculated]],"note insectoid machines (cf. and contrast more squid-like Sentinels).1 KB (224 words) - 21:23, 25 August 2019
- '''Astel, Richard. "The History of a War Against the Mend-and-Repair."''' ''MR47/48:'' 194-99 (see under Literary Cr The "mend-and-repairs" are machines with "reincarnative functioning" for the humans under their control. See fo763 bytes (113 words) - 19:30, 12 August 2019
- '''McAuley, Paul. ''The Quiet War''.''' London: Gollancz, 2008. New York: Pyr, 2009.[http://www.isfdb.org/cgi ''The Quiet War'' combines elements of space opera, terraforming colonization, future techn2 KB (236 words) - 20:58, 16 June 2022
- '''Wells, H. G. ''The War of the Worlds''.''' London, UK: Heinemann, 1898, from 1897 serialization in ...[[WAR OF THE WORLDS (2005)]], and note shifting of imaging of the Martian machines and weapons technology, including the eerily beautiful manta ray model from3 KB (541 words) - 22:32, 15 August 2023
- ...ers in Italy before World War I and produced a number of works celebrating machines. See ''Futurism'' volume for a view the movement from late in the 20th c.310 bytes (48 words) - 23:29, 24 October 2014
- ...an_Literature]] See also Butler's separately published "[[Darwin Among the Machines]]" (1863). ...ines," Butler imagined that the "gradual evolution of increasingly complex machines" might eventually develop in them "a consciousness of their own, as the hig2 KB (348 words) - 20:54, 17 August 2021
- ....org/wiki/index.php?title=Clockwork_Worlds,_ed._Erlich_%26_Dunn]] and by [[Machines and the Meaning of Human in the Novels of Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.|T. Wymer]] in ...ore's dissertation "[[Practising the Posthumanities: Evolutionary Animals, Machines and the Posthuman in the Fiction of J.G. Ballard and Kurt Vonnegut]]."1 KB (171 words) - 23:22, 29 July 2023
- '''Franklin, H. Bruce. ''War Stars: The Superweapon and the American Imagination''.''' New York: Oxford ...roticizing heavy bombers. See this Category, J. W. Gibson, ''[[The Perfect War: Technowar in Vietnam]]''.[http://www.clockworks2.org/wiki/index.php?title=3 KB (409 words) - 23:42, 28 August 2019
- ...e humans, no matter how hard they tried they were never accepted. Thus the war. This 'runner' learned the human capacity for sheer manipulation […]" <ht2 KB (295 words) - 14:32, 12 April 2007
- ...ational literatures that have produced SF: e.g., laboratories, Martian war machines, robots and the Golem, submarines and rocket ships.488 bytes (68 words) - 23:10, 27 August 2019
- ...r less alive "by great self-replicating machines" that run things and make war on each other, and can soon afford to eliminate people (266)[[http://www.cl595 bytes (90 words) - 17:46, 24 September 2014
- ...oon-taxis abound), and finds equally “stupid” and “terrible” armies of war machines that automatically fight each other. After inadvertently ruining an “arti ...tps://www.clockworks2.org/wiki/index.php?title=Special%3ASearch&search=war+machines&go=Go]2 KB (322 words) - 21:56, 23 May 2020
- ...zation, inflexible regimentation, one-way communication, and readiness for war" (15, 17).580 bytes (79 words) - 14:06, 1 November 2014