kingjon wrote:
By contrast, my understanding (though I admit I've read very little of the genre itself) is that the "punk" in the name is merely indicative of its etymology, its having been derived from "cyberpunk." (See my explanation above.) And the "punk" in "cyberpunk" seems to have been lost as an "essential" of that genre (though, again, I'm not very familiar with it at all).
My info, although I have read some steampunk and to a large extent it fit this description, comes primarily from the introduction to
Steampunk written by Jess Nevins.
"Steampunk, like all good punk, rebels against the system it portrays (Victorian London or something quite like it), critiquing its treatment of the underclass, its validation of the privileged at the cost of everyone else, its lack of mercy, its cutthroat capitalism. Like the punks, steampunk rarely offers a solution to the problems it decries -- for steampunk, there is no solution -- but for both punk and steampunk the criticism must be made before the change can come. The Edisonades could not have conceived of steampunk. Steampunk is well aware of the Edisonade boy inventor, and kills him, as villains must be killed, by the end of the story.
"It might be objected that the preceding only holds true for first generation steampunk, and that much or even most second generation steampunk is not true steampunk -- there is little to nothing "punk" about it. The politics of the punk position have largely disappeared from second generation steampunk, and most of it is more accurately described as "steam sci-fi" or, following John Clute, "gaslight romance." The authors of the Edisonades would have loathed first generation steampunk, but they would have approved of second generation steampunk, with its steam machines used against the American natives in Westerns, and steam-powered war machines being used in the service of the British army conquering Mars . . . This abandonment of ideology is . . . an emasculation that is inevitable once a subgenre becomes established . . . But its loss is nonetheless to be mourned."
I took his facts as gospel and rejected his politics. Nevertheless, I agreed with him that rightists should label their works accurately, and not as "punk" of any sort.
kingjon wrote:
I've seen "gaslight fantasy"; the "gaslight" indicates that it's a lot higher tech level than most (non-"urban") fantasy includes.
But, if I'm not mistaken, far
lower than steampunk; closer to the actual Victorian era, yes?
kingjon wrote:
But genre labels "sticking" when the actual content of the genre has significantly and substantially changed is one of the hazards of our trade

.
I hate verbicide.