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A nice and insightful article on steampunk. It even mentioned Abney Park
Seriously, it bugs me how certain philistines and ultra-modernists look down on anything glamourising the aesthetics or technology of a past era, or indeed feel that anything "old-fashioned" or "obsolete" belongs in a museum or worse, in a scrapyard. I would gladly break their bones with a falchion (being meta here) for even saying such a thing.
Do you know anyone who reacts with hostility to steampunk or the like?
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I can't say I've ever come across a lot of hate for the genre. The last encounter I had with anything steampunk related was an exhibition of a bunch of imaginary contraptions at a museum in Oxford which seemed to greatly amuse the visitors.
I think there's always been an undercurrent of this sort of thing in English culture e.g. when I was a kid, a local shopping centre had at its centre a kind of sculpture of a fantastically-complex retro flying machine, complete with model pilot, that used to come to life on the hour and move around to the accompaniment of music. Even earlier, there were things like the Heath Robinson cartoons. It may be less familiar in other countries.
Hmm...
So it should be called Steam?
I prefer Phil Foglio's term 'gaslight fantasy' but let's see that one take off...
Even with that article all I can think is mostly steam powered tech with victorian era clothing and ideals
Dirigibles are also highly common in steampunk, but dirigibles mostly use lighter-than-air gases and internal combustion engines to function. Not very steamlike. But they're part of "the path not taken" concept prevalent in steampunk, and that's why they're so common. Steampunk is mainly Old Meets New, not Everything Is Steam.
I'd even argue that Treasure Planet treads on steampunk ground, but everyone is welcome to disagree.
And in theory, if you had the American Revolution being fought where American minutemen went up against gyro-powered armored suits that increased their strength, that could also be steampunk (and really fucking weird.)
Also, just a fun fact: Jules Verne's 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea? The story which many steampunk works take major inspiration from? Yeah, the Nautilus was electric powered.