The Military science fiction reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Jul-2004
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Military science fiction

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Military science fiction is a subset of science fiction/space opera where interstellar or interplanetary conflict and its (usually) armed solution make up the backdrop of the story. Typically, the conflict is assumed to be inevitable (Humans vs. inhuman bugs, Democracies vs. Dictatorships, ...), and the military approach is not questioned. Traditional military values (discipline, courage, chain of command) are stressed, and the action is described from the point of view of a soldier or officer. Technology is advanced, but fairly static, wars are not primarily won by R&D or even logistics, but by willpower and military virtues.

Thus, while the original Star Wars movies have an armed conflict as backdrop, they would not usually be considered military sf. Most Star Trek series are not part of this genre, although Deep Space Nine borrows some of the genre conventions in later seasons. Similarly, Babylon 5 is a borderline case. is clear military sf, but the Lensmen cycle by E.E. Doc Smith is not.

A very popular series, and a recommended intro to this subgenre is David Weber's on-going Honor Harrington series, which comes with 'reasonably' logical technology, believable plot, and (disputed by some) outstanding character depth.

Another of the defining authors of the genre is David Drake, especially with his Hammer's Slammers series, but also with many of his other works.

While much military science fiction is pure entertainment, and caters to a similar audience as historical and modern military novels, some authors manage to work within the genre conventions while posing interesting new questions. An example is Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game novel, where children are trained from a young age to fight for humanity.

Many current military science fiction books are published by Baen publishing house.

List of military science fiction positions: