Dr David T. Fortin is an Assistant Professor at Montana State University School of Architecture, USA.
'David Fortin's Architecture and Science-Fiction Film boldly takes us where no commentary has gone before. It deftly draws on architectural theory to illuminate not only the larger tradition of science-fiction film and its efforts at envisioning new ways of living, but also the specific fascination with the home and with habitation that has figured centrally in cinematic adaptations of one of the most important science-fiction writers, Philip K. Dick. The result is a smart and challenging book, one that should become essential reading in science-fiction studies.' J. P. Telotte, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA 'David Fortin offers an uncanny conceptual archaeology of domestic space in this wide-ranging study. The mythic, psychological, economic, and, of course, literary effects of the home - an architectural environment so frequently experienced yet so little understood - are pursued relentlessly throughout Fortin's text. A brutal, effective, and wholly necessary contribution.' Geoff Manaugh, author of BLDGBLOG, USA 'Fortin's book is a valuable addition to the growing corpus of texts that are truly interdisciplinary... In drawing together architecture, film, literature, science and technology studies and philosophy, Fortin has provided a significant resource for scholars of these disciplines and a suitable tribute to one of the most prolific and prescient SF writers of the last century.' Viewfinder ’Fortin manages persuasively to tie modernist/postmodernist architecture with the concerns of sf literature... the text provides valuable reading for sf scholars who are interested in cinema.’ Science Fiction Studies 'Fortin’s book offers an exciting breadth and depth of theory and ideas about representations of home in science fiction (SF) film... the book delivers one gem after another, and has much to offer its readers.' Media International Australia