public panels
Oct 20, 2015
My World Fantasy Con Schedule
See you in Saratoga
I'm not primarily a fantasy writer, but some great works have had a huge influence on me--most importantly, Mervyn Peake's epic Gormenghast. I read The Lord of the Rings like most kids, and was on my third read of it when I discovered Peake. After finishing Gormenghast, I didn't return to Tolkien for another twenty years.
I'll be going on about that and other stuff on my panels, but heck, I'm really there just to hang out and talk, so if you're going to the convention look for me. I'll be around and happy to shmooze.
The schedule:
City Center 2B | Magic is the essential ingredient of Epic Fantasy… except when it isn't. Can a story be Epic Fantasy if there isn't a spell hurling mage? Do all quests need a wizard? The panel will discuss how magic is used in Epic Fantasy and some of the texts that do things a little differently. Paul DiFilippo (mod.), David Keck, Kate Laity, Karl Schroeder |
Friday:
1:00•City Center 2B | The Fantastic Cities of Monstrous Magnitude Epic Fantasy has created some of the most arresting and wondrous architecture ever dreamed of. The panel will discuss some of their favorite settings in Epic Fantasy and why those cities and buildings evoke such wonder. John Clute, Gemma Files, David Levine, Karl Schroeder |
Reading, 11:00, in Broadway 2
Jul 17, 2015
My Sasquan Schedule (Revised August 19)
I'll be at Worldcon this year. Here's how to find me.
I hope to see you in Spokane. Here's what I'll be doing:
The Changing Face of Hard Science Fiction
Thursday 16:00 - 16:45, Bays 111B (CC)
Hard science fiction has roots that at least go back to Verne, and it's been a major part of the field -- some would argue it's been the center of the field, or even the only real SF -- since at least the 1940s. But like the rest of SF, it has evolved and change. Where is it now and where is it going?
The Future of Government
Thursday 17:00 - 17:45, 300B (CC)
We like to think that US democracy is the ultimate and best form of government. But the world has seen many different forms of government over the centuries, and even today many different forms exist around the world. What will governments in the US and other countries be like in the next 10, 50, or 200 years? How will changing technologies and world conditions (e.g., climate change) affect those forms? Are there forms of government that have been proposed that have never existed in the real world, but might?
Genre and the Global Police State
Thursday 20:00 - 20:45, 300C (CC)
Thanks to the Five Eyes -- the joint intelligence sharing treaty between the USA, UK, Australia, and others -- and the total penetration of the internet by NSA/GCHQ monitoring, we now live in a society that is a secret policeman's dream. Wikileaks and then Edward Snowden blew the lid off the scandalous subversion of western democracies by unaccountable secret government agencies. In past decades, SF and fantasy provided a vehicle for trenchant social and political commentary on on-going cultural changes (consider "The Forever War" as a comment on Vietnam), but where are the genre works dealing with the global police state?
SF
and Futurism (Moderator)
Friday, August 21 2015, 1:00 pm
with Trina Marie Phillips, Matt Wallace
Kaffee
Klatsche
Friday, August 21 2015, 4:00 pm
Reading
Saturday, August 22 2015, 12:00 pm
Climate Change and Health
Sunday 11:00 - 11:45, Bays 111B (CC)
The climate is changing in ways that have big implications for the future well-being of humans. There will be direct effects (e.g., heat stress) and indirect effects (e.g., disease-carrying mosquitos moving northward). The panelists will discuss what is happening now, what we can expect in the near future, and what might occur down the road if climate change continues on its present course.
Autographing CANCELLED - TRYING TO RESCHEDULE
Sunday 12:00 - 12:45, Exhibit Hall B (CC)
Apr 07, 2015
Ad Astra schedule
I'll be there this weekend, Saturday 11th and Sunday the 12th of April, 2015
Saturday
A Trillion Is a Statistic ◼Sci-Fi & Fantasy
Time: 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM
Room: Markham B
Panellists: Andrew Barton, Ian Keeling
It happens so often in science fiction there's a name for it: "earth-shattering kaboom." From Lensmen to Ender's Game and beyond, sf has been solving problems with genocide for decades. Is this just authorial laziness, motivating heroes with a big enough bang, or is reflective of something dark in the genre's soul?
A.I. and Us: Heuristics of Surpassing the Human Brain ◼Science & Technology
Time: 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Room: Aurora
Panellists: Hayden Trenholm, Madeline Ashby, Nina Munteanu
When the BBC posts an article reporting the world's preeminent theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking warning that AI will eventually spell the end of the human race, all eyes turn to predictions of the Singularity. Those same predictions put it within the prime of the upcoming generation of scientists and engineers, so what teachings can the current generation pass on to insure the singularity doesn't mean the end of the human race? Or is the deprecation of our intelligence inevitable...
Sunday
Readings: Karl Schroeder & Hayden Trenholm ◼Readings & Podcasts
Time: 2:00 PM - 3:00 PM
Room: Buttonville
Panellist: Hayden Trenholm
Feb 20, 2014
Mathematics in Science Fiction - this weekend
I'll be one of the speakers at the Fields Institute's panel discussion
How does math influence science fiction? In my case, I'm functionally inumerate and yet have created hard-SF universes that others have written scientific papers about. How does that work? This Saturday myself, Suzanne Church and Tony Pi will be talking about the intersection point of math and imagination--and perhaps, about the idea that there's no real difference between the two.
See you there!
Aug 17, 2013
My 2013 Worldcon schedule
It's a busy one, though I'll only be there for Saturday and Sunday
Keeping in the spirit of dumping all kinds of news at once, here's my schedule for the 2013 World Science Fiction Convention in San Antonio, Texas, which is taking place over the Labour Day weekend. It's a whirlwind visit as I need to get back to Toronto to continue futuring for my new employer, Idea Couture. Luckily, I've got lots going on. If I'm lucky, I'll even get there early enough Friday night to take over the bathtub bar at the Tor party. We'll see. Meanwhile, here's my itinerary:
Reading: Karl Schroeder
Saturday 10:00 - 11:00
Karl Schroeder
Autographing:
Ellen Datlow, Josh Rountree, Karl Schroeder, Lynne M. Thomas
Saturday 12:00 - 13:00
Ellen Datlow , Lynne M. Thomas , Josh Rountree , Karl Schroeder
Consensual
Reality: Your Relationship to the World
Saturday 15:00 - 16:00
Google Glasses, augmented reality, kinetic gaming, tactile transmission systems. These and other new technologies are on the horizon to transmogrify sense and sensation. Google glasses are the first step to putting an overlay on the reality we see. This opens the door to hiding the ugly and changing what we see. When we do this socially it leads to possible consensual reality as in the works of Vinge, Schroeder and others. What will such capability mean in reality? Has science fiction explored the societal consequences?
Edie Stern (M), Yasser Bahjatt , Walter Jon Williams , Ben Bova , Karl Schroeder
Kaffeeklatsch:
Nancy Kress, Edward M. Lerner, Karl Schroeder
Saturday 17:00 - 18:00
Edward M. Lerner , Nancy Kress , Karl Schroeder
Speed-Forecasting
Workshop
Sunday 10:00 - 13:00
We will do a quick analysis of the future, with the end product being four scenarios that highlight different possibilities. Come take your work to the future!
Karl Schroeder
Have We Lost
the Future?
Sunday 14:00 - 15:00
Where science fiction once looked to the future as the setting for speculation, nowadays the focus seems to be on alternate pasts, fantasy worlds, or consciously "retro" futures. We're no longer showing the way to what things might be like. We discuss whether this is connected to the general fear of decline and decay in the English-language world -- or has science fiction simply run out of ideas?
Karen Burnham (M), Brenda Cooper , Karl Schroeder , Willie Siros , Derek Kunsken
As You Know,
Jim...
Sunday 15:00 - 16:00
Exposition is never easy. How can writers communicate the details of a setting, magical system or incredible scientific breakthrough without losing half their audience? What makes a readers eyes glaze over and how do you avoid it?
Michelle Sagara (M) , Tanya Huff , Karl Schroeder , Jack McDevitt , Walter Jon Williams
First Contact
Without a Universal Translator
Sunday 17:00 - 18:00
How do we establish a common conceptual base to communicate with another species? Sure, we have numbers and the hydrogen atom in common, but how far would that get us in a world of beings who share none of our sensory apparatus?
Lawrence M. Schoen (M) , Paige E. Ewing , Karl Schroeder
By the way, if you want to plan your days, the entire schedule is or will shortly be online at http://www.lonestarcon3.org/guests/appearing.shtml.
That's it. See you all there!
International Festival of Authors
Come on out on Thursday!
I'm going to have the privilege of sitting down with Hugo Award winning author Robert Charles Wilson this Thursday for a public discussion about worldbuilding. You're invited to come down and sit in. Bob and I will be chatting at the International Festival of Authors. The venue is the Direct Energy Centre at Exhibition Place down at Toronto's harbourfront.
You can find further details here--but briefly, it's starting at 5:30 on Thursday August 22, 2013. Adding structure and sanity to the discussion will be Bert Archer, noted author, critic, journalist and essayist. It should be a lively combination, especially since Bob and I have such widely divergent (but equally rigorous) approaches to presenting our worlds. No hints--you'll have to show up to find out what I mean.