Second Annual Science & Fiction Confab

Wednesday, March 20, 2024

1:00 p.m.

Graham Center 140

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With Luminaries

  • Ken Liu

    Ken Liu (http://kenliu.name) is an American author of speculative fiction. A winner of the Nebula, Hugo, and World Fantasy awards, he wrote the Dandelion Dynasty, a silkpunk epic fantasy series (starting with The Grace of Kings), as well as short story collections The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories and The Hidden Girl and Other Stories. He also penned the Star Wars novel The Legends of Luke Skywalker. Prior to becoming a full-time writer, Liu worked as a software engineer, corporate lawyer, and litigation consultant. Liu frequently speaks at conferences and universities on a variety of topics, including futurism, machine-augmented creativity, history of technology, bookmaking, and the mathematics of origami.

  • Usman Malik

    Usman T. Malik is a physician-writer whose fiction has been published at Al-Jazeera, WIRED magazine, Center for Science and Imagination (ASU), in New Voices of Fantasy and more than a dozen best of the year anthologies, including The Best American Science Fiction & Fantasy series. Usman's debut book Midnight Doorways: Fables from Pakistan won the 2022 World Fantasy Award and the 2022 Crawford Award from the International Association for the Fantastic in Arts (IAFA), and was on Washington Post's 2021 list of best new science fiction and fantasy collections. During the day, Usman is a consultant rheumatologist with Sanford Health systems and is Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine at University of Central Florida.

  • Vandana Singh

    Vandana Singh is a writer of science fiction with three collections to her credit, including the Philip K. Dick Award finalist Ambiguity Machines & Other Stories (Small Beer Press), and a chapbook in the Outspoken Author series from PM Press, Utopias of the Third Kind. Recent fiction includes two stories in the Climate Action Almanac, a project of the Center for Science and the Imagination at Arizona State University https://www.climatealmanac.org/. She is a professor of physics and environment at Framingham State University in Massachusetts, where her academic work involves a transdisciplinary, justice-centered reconceptualization of the climate crisis at the intersection of science, society and pedagogy. Her book, Teaching Climate Change: Science, Stories, Justice, is out from Routledge in January, 2024.

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This event is made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed with relation to this event do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.