Wikipedia talk:Featured article candidates/Venus in fiction/archive2

TFA blurb edit

 
A 1939 magazine cover featuring "The Golden Amazons of Venus"

The planet Venus has appeared in fiction since before the 19th century. Its impenetrable cloud cover gave science fiction writers free rein to speculate on conditions at its surface, which was often depicted as warmer than Earth but habitable. Images of a lush, verdant paradise, an oceanic planet, or fetid swampland, often inhabited by dinosaur-like beasts or other monsters, became common in early pulp science fiction, particularly between the 1930s and 1950s. Some other stories portrayed the surface as a desert, or invented more exotic settings. Venusians were often portrayed as gentle, ethereal and beautiful, and often female, after the Roman goddess. From the mid-20th century on, as the reality of Venus's harsh surface conditions became known, the planet has mostly been portrayed as a hostile, toxic inferno, requiring terraforming. The vision of a tropical Venus has occasionally been revisited in intentionally retro stories. (Full article...)

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