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{{Short description|1959 science fiction novel by Robert A. Heinlein}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2011}}
{{About|the novel|the 1997 film|Starship Troopers (film)}} {{About|the novel|the 1997 film|Starship Troopers (film){{!}}''Starship Troopers'' (film)|other uses|Starship Troopers (disambiguation)}}
{{Other uses}}

{{Featured article}} {{Featured article}}
{{Use American English|date = April 2019}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2017}}
{{Infobox book {{Infobox book
| name = Starship Troopers | name = Starship Troopers
| image = ] | image = Starship Troopers (novel).jpg
| image_caption = First edition cover | caption = First edition hardcover
| author=] | author = ]
| cover_artist = | cover_artist = ]
| country = United States | country = United States
| language = English | language = English
| genre = Science fiction<br />]<ref name="salon">{{cite web|url=http://www.salon.com/col/shoa/1997/11/13shoa.html |title=Ill Humor |publisher=Salon |date=November 13, 1997 |accessdate=March 27, 2010}}</ref><ref>James, Edward & Farah | genre = ]{{br}}]<ref name="Salon">{{cite web |last=Shoales|first=Ian|url= http://www.salon.com/col/shoa/1997/11/13shoa.html |title= Ill Humor |work=]|date= November 13, 1997 |access-date=March 27, 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090514064954/http://www.salon.com/col/shoa/1997/11/13shoa.html |archive-date= May 14, 2009 }}</ref>{{sfn|Macleod|2003|p=231}}<ref name="Hubble"/>
Mendlesohn. ''The Cambridge Companion to Science Fiction''. Cambridge University
Press, 2003. pp 231<br />" works include some that are sensitive to the realities of politics, and some that decidedly are not, but which do embody the imaginative exposition of a political philosophy. The best example of the former is ''Double Star''; of the latter, ''Starship Troopers''."</ref>
| publisher=] | publisher=]
| release_date = November 5, 1959<ref name=nyt19591105>{{cite news |date=November 5, 1959 |title=Books Today |work=] |page=32 }}</ref>
| release_date = December 1959
| media_type = Print (hardback & paperback) | media_type = Print (hardcover and paperback)
| pages = 263 pp (paperback edition) | pages = 263 (paperback edition)
| isbn = 0-450-02576-4 | isbn = 978-0450044496
| dewey = | congress = PZ7.H368 Su
| congress = PZ7.H368 Su8
| oclc= 2797649 | oclc= 2797649
}} }}
'''''Starship Troopers''''' is a ] novel by ], first published (in abridged form) as a serial in '']'' (October, November 1959, as "''Starship Soldier''") and published hardcover in December, 1959.


'''''Starship Troopers''''' is a ] novel by American writer ]. Written in a few weeks in reaction to the US ],<ref name="Gifford"/> the story was first published as a two-part serial in '']'' as '''''Starship Soldier''''', and published as a book by ] on November 5, 1959.<ref name=nyt19591105 />
<!--Please do not alter to state that Rico is Argentinian, in the book he is a Filipino-->
<!--The book states that his mother dies in Buenos Aires, but she was far from home at the time- from chapter 10 "I thought that both my parents were dead&nbsp;— since Father would never send Mother on a trip that long by herself." -->
The ] is about a young soldier named ] and his exploits in the ], a futuristic military unit equipped with ]. Rico's military career progresses from ] to ] and finally to ] against the backdrop of an interstellar war between mankind and an arachnoid species known as "]". Through Rico's eyes, Heinlein examines moral and philosophical aspects of ], ], the necessities of war and capital punishment, and the nature of ].<ref>{{Failed verification|date=August 2009}}{{cite web| url=http://www.luna-city.com/sf/novel.htm|title=ROBERT A. HEINLEIN: THE NOVELS| publisher=Luna-City.com| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref>


The story is set in a future society ruled by a human interstellar government called the Terran Federation, dominated by a military elite. Under the Terran Federation, only veterans of Federal Service (including, but not limited to, military service) enjoy full citizenship, such as the right to vote.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=214}} The ] follows Juan "Johnny" Rico, a young man of ] descent, through his military service in the Mobile Infantry. He progresses from recruit to ] against the backdrop of an interstellar war between humans and an alien species known as "Arachnids" or "Bugs". Interspersed with the primary plot are classroom scenes in which Rico and others discuss philosophical and moral issues, including aspects of ], ], ], and war; these discussions have been described as expounding Heinlein's own political views.<ref name=EOLAIS/> ''Starship Troopers'' has been identified with a tradition of ] in US science fiction,{{sfn|Suvin|2008|p=122}} and draws parallels between the conflict between humans and the Bugs, and the ].{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=218}} A ], ''Starship Troopers'' also criticizes the US society of the 1950s, arguing that a lack of discipline had led to a moral decline, and advocates ] and ].<ref name="EOLAIS"/>{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|pp=215–216}}
''Starship Troopers'' won the ] in 1960.<ref name="WWE-1960">{{cite web
|url=http://www.worldswithoutend.com/books_year_index.asp?year=1960
|title=1960 Award Winners & Nominees
|work=Worlds Without End
|accessdate=July 27, 2009}}</ref> The novel has attracted controversy and criticism for its social and political themes, which some critics claim promote fascism and ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.salon.com/ent/movies/1997/11/07starship.html|title=Scott Rosenberg's critic of the movie from Salon.com, describing a fascist "G.I. Joe" novel| accessdate=April 18, 2006}}</ref> ''Starship Troopers'' has been adapted into several films and games, with the most widely known being the 1997 ] by ].


''Starship Troopers'' brought to an end ]. It won the ] in 1960,<ref name="Hubble"/> and ] by reviewers for its scenes of training and combat and its visualization of a future military.<ref name=Myers/>{{sfn|Macleod|2003|p=233}} It also became enormously controversial because of the political views it seemed to support. Reviewers were strongly critical of the book's intentional glorification of the military,{{sfn|Heinlein|2003|p=484}}{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|pp=155–156}} an aspect described as propaganda and likened to ].{{sfn|Franklin|1980|pp=111–112}} The novel's militarism, and the fact that government service{{snd}}most often military service{{snd}}was a prerequisite to the right to vote in the novel's fictional society, led to it being frequently described as ].{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|pp=155–156}}{{sfn|Cass|1999|p=52}}<ref name="Goss"/> Others disagree, arguing that Heinlein was only exploring the idea of limiting the right to vote to a certain group of people.<ref name="JW"/> Heinlein's depiction of gender has also been questioned, while reviewers have said that the terms used to describe the aliens were akin to ].<ref name="Magill"/>
==Heinlein's military background and political views==
Heinlein graduated from the ] in 1929, and served on active duty in the ] for five years. He served on the then new ] ] in 1931, and as a naval lieutenant aboard the ] ] between 1933 and 1934, until he was forced to leave the Navy due to ]. Heinlein never served in active combat while a Navy officer and he was a civilian during ] doing ] at the ].<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.heinleinsociety.org/rah/biographies.html| title=Biographies of Robert and Virginia Heinlein| accessdate=December 16, 2007}}</ref> Heinlein's non-combat Naval service would become a point of contention in later criticism of ''Starship Troopers''.


Despite the controversy, ''Starship Troopers'' had ] both within and outside science fiction. ] stated that "the political strand in can be described as a dialogue with Heinlein".{{sfn|Macleod|2003|p=231}} Science fiction critic ] wrote that ''Starship Troopers'' is the "ancestral text of US science fiction militarism" and that it shaped the debate about the role of the military in society for many years.{{sfn|Suvin|2008|p=123}} The novel has been credited with popularizing the idea of ], which has since become a recurring feature in science fiction books and films, as well as an object of scientific research.<ref name="Liptak"/> Heinlein's depiction of a futuristic military was also influential.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=221}} Later science fiction books, such as ]'s 1974 anti-war novel '']'', have been described as reactions to ''Starship Troopers''.<ref name=JH/> The story has been adapted several times, including in a ] directed by ] with screenplay by ] that sought to satirize what the director saw as the fascist aspects of the novel.<ref name=Strzelczyk/>
According to Heinlein, his desire to write ''Starship Troopers'' was sparked by the publication of a newspaper advertisement placed by the ] on April 5, 1958 calling for a unilateral suspension of ] by the United States. In response, Robert and Virginia Heinlein created the small "Patrick Henry League" in an attempt to create support for the ]. During the unsuccessful campaign, Heinlein found himself under attack both from within and outside the science fiction community for his views. ''Starship Troopers'' may therefore be viewed as Heinlein both clarifying and defending his military and political views of the time.<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=Expanded Universe| pages=468–469, 481–482| publisher=Baen Books|isbn=0448119161}}, page numbers vary depending on edition.</ref>


==Writing of the novel== ==Writing and publication==
]'' (November 1959), illustrating ''Starship Soldier'']]
Some time during 1958 and 1959, Heinlein ceased work on the novel that would become '']'' and wrote ''Starship Troopers''. It was first published in '']'' in October and November 1959 as a ] called ''Starship Soldier''. Although originally written as a ] for New York publishing house ], it was rejected,<ref name="Gifford">{{cite web|last=Gifford| first=James| url=http://www.nitrosyncretic.com/rah/ftp/fedrlsvc.pdf| title=The Nature of Federal Service in Robert A. Heinlein's ''Starship Troopers''| accessdate=March 4, 2006| format=PDF}}</ref> prompting Heinlein to cease writing juvenile fiction for Scribners, to end his association with them completely, and begin writing books with more adult themes.<ref>{{cite web|last=Causo|first=Roberto de Sousa| url=http://www.wegrokit.com/causost.htm| title=Citizenship at War| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref> The novel was eventually published as teenage fiction by ].<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.heinleinsociety.org/rah/biographies.html| publisher=The Heinlein Society| title=Biographies of Robert and Virginia Heinlein| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref>


Robert Heinlein was among the best-selling science fiction authors of the 1940s and 1950s, along with ] and ]; they were known as the "big three" that dominated US science fiction. In contrast to the others, Heinlein firmly endorsed the anti-communist sentiment of the ] era in his writing.<ref>{{cite book |last=Parrinder |first=Patrick |title=Learning from Other Worlds: Estrangement, Cognition, and the Politics of Science Fiction and Utopia |url=https://archive.org/details/learningfromothe00parr |url-access=limited |publisher=]|location= ], UK|year=2000|page= |isbn= 978-0-8223-2773-8}}</ref> Heinlein served in the US Navy for five years after graduating from the ] in 1929. His experience in the military profoundly influenced his fiction.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=47}} At some point between 1958 and 1959, Heinlein put aside the novel that would become '']'' and wrote ''Starship Troopers''. His motivation arose partially from his anger at US President ]'s ], and the Soviet tests that occurred soon afterward.<ref name="Gifford"/> Writing in his 1980 volume '']'', Heinlein would say that the publication of a newspaper advertisement placed by the ] on April 5, 1958, calling for a unilateral suspension of ] by the United States sparked his desire to write ''Starship Troopers''.{{sfn|Heinlein|2003|pp=468–469}} Heinlein and his wife ] created the "]" in an attempt to create support for the US nuclear testing program. Heinlein stated that he used the novel to clarify his military and political views.{{sfn|Heinlein|2003|pp=468–469, 481–482}}
==Plot==
]'' (November 1959), illustrating ''Starship Soldier''.]]
{{Further|]}}


Like many of Heinlein's books, ''Starship Troopers'' was completed in a few weeks. It was originally written as a ] for New York publishing house ]; Heinlein had previously had success with this format, having written several such novels published by Scribner. The manuscript was rejected, prompting Heinlein to end his association with the publisher completely, and resume writing books with adult themes.<ref name="Gifford">{{cite web| last=Gifford| first=James| url=http://www.nitrosyncretic.com/rah/ftp/fedrlsvc.pdf| title=The Nature of Federal Service in Robert A. Heinlein's ''Starship Troopers''| access-date=March 4, 2006| year=1996| archive-date=May 15, 2013| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130515235828/http://www.nitrosyncretic.com/rah/ftp/fedrlsvc.pdf| url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Magill">{{cite encyclopedia|editor-last1=Magill|editor-first1=Frank N.|title=Starship Troopers|encyclopedia=Survey of Science Fiction Literature: Volume V|date=1979|last=Samuelson|first=David N.|publisher=Salem Press|location=], US|isbn=0-89356-199-1|pages=2173–2177}}</ref><ref name=HS>{{cite web |url= http://www.heinleinsociety.org/rah/biographies.html |publisher= The Heinlein Society |title= Biographies of Robert and Virginia Heinlein |access-date= March 4, 2006 |archive-date= November 28, 2012 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20121128133424/http://www.heinleinsociety.org/rah/biographies.html |url-status= dead }}</ref> Scholars have suggested that Scribner's rejection was based on ideological objections to the content of the novel, particularly its treatment of military conflict.<ref name="Magill"/><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Crim |first1=Brian E. |title= "A World That Works": Fascism and Media Globalization in Starship Troopers |journal= Film & History |date=2009 |doi= 10.1353/flm.0.0105 |volume=39 |issue=2 |pages=17–29 |s2cid=155012971 }}</ref>
''Starship Troopers'' takes place in the midst of an interstellar war between the ] of Earth and the ] (referred to as "The Bugs") of ]. It is narrated as a series of flashbacks by Juan Rico, and is one of only a few Heinlein novels set out in this fashion.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.enter.net/~torve/critics/Dimension/hd05-3.html| title=Heinlein in Dimension| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref> The novel opens with Rico aboard the ] '']'', serving with the platoon known as "Rasczak's Roughnecks" (named after the platoon leader, Lt. Rasczak) about to embark on a raid against the planet of the "Skinnies," who are allies of the Arachnids. We learn that he is a cap(sule) trooper in the Terran Federation's ]. The raid itself, one of the few instances of actual combat in the novel, is relatively brief: the Roughnecks land on the planet, destroy their targets, and retreat, suffering a single casualty in the process (Dizzy Flores, who dies in the retrieval boat of wounds received in action).


'']'' first published ''Starship Troopers'' in October and November 1959 as a two-part ] titled ''Starship Soldier''.<ref name=HS/> A senior editor at Putnam's, Peter Israel, purchased the manuscript and approved revisions that made it more marketable to adults. Asked whether it was aimed at children or adults, he said at a sales conference "Let's let the readers decide who likes it."<ref>{{cite book | first= William H. Jr. |last=Patterson |title= Robert A. Heinlein in Dialogue with His Century, Volume 2, 1948–1988: The Man Who Learned Better |location= New York City, New York, US|publisher=Tor |year=2014 |page=173}}</ref> The novel was eventually published by ].<ref name=HS/>
The story then flashes back to Rico's graduation from high school, and his decision to sign up for Federal Service over the objections of his father, who disowns him. This is the only chapter that describes Rico's civilian life, and most of it is spent on the monologues of two people: retired Lt. Col. Jean V. Dubois, Rico's school instructor in "History and Moral Philosophy," and Fleet Sergeant Ho, a recruiter for the armed forces of the Terran Federation.


==Setting==
Dubois serves as a stand-in for Heinlein throughout the novel, and delivers what is probably the book's most famous soliloquy on violence, and how it "has settled more issues in history than has any other factor."<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=Starship Troopers| year=1987| page=26|isbn=1156855438}}</ref> Fleet Sergeant Ho's monologues examine the nature of military service, and his anti-military tirades appear in the book primarily as a contrast with Dubois. It is later revealed that his rants are calculated to scare off the weaker applicants.
Set approximately 700 years in the future,<ref name="Magill"/> the book depicts an Earth ruled by a ] run by military veterans.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=214}} The society is depicted as affluent, and futuristic technology shown as coexisting with educational methods from the 20th century.<ref name="Magill"/> The rights of a full citizen, to vote and hold public office, are not universally guaranteed, and rather must be earned through Federal Service.<ref name="JW"/> Those who do not perform this service (of which only military service has been described) retain the rights of free speech and assembly, but can neither vote nor hold public office. Those of either sex, above the age of 18, are permitted to enlist; only those who complete their service receive the right to vote.<ref name="Magill"/>{{sfn|Franklin|1980|p=111}} Important government jobs are reserved for federal service veterans.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=214}} This structure arose ''ad hoc'' after the collapse of the "20th century Western democracies", driven in part by an inability to control crime and ], particularly in North America, and a war between an alliance of the United States, the United Kingdom and Russia, against the "Chinese Hegemony".{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=145–150}}


Two extraterrestrial civilizations are depicted, respectively, as the "Pseudo-Arachnids" (or "Bugs"), and the "Skinnies". The "Bugs" are described as communal beings originating from the planet of Klendathu, and consist of multiple castes; workers, warriors, brains, and queens, similar to those of ]s and ]s on Earth. The warriors are the only ones who fight, and are unable to surrender in battle.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=170–180}} It also is implied that the Bugs are technologically advanced, possessing such technologies as spaceships.{{sfn|Heinlein|2014|loc=Kindle Loc 2128}} The "Skinnies" are depicted as less communal than the Arachnids, yet more so than humans.{{sfn|Franklin|1980|p=118}} The events of the novel take place during an interstellar war between the Terran Federation and the Arachnids.{{sfn|Panshin|1968|loc=chpt. 5, sec. 5}} At the opening of the story, Earth is not at war, yet such a declaration has come when Rico has completed his training.<ref name="Gifford"/> The "Skinnies" are initially allies of the Pseudo-Arachnids, but switch to alliance with humans, midway through the novel.{{sfn|Franklin|1980|p=118}} ] travel exists in this future: spacecraft use the "Cherenkov drive", and can travel "Sol to Capella, forty-six ], in under six weeks".{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=262–268}}
Interspersed throughout the book are other flashbacks to Rico's high school History and Moral Philosophy course, which describe how in the Terran Federation of Rico's day, the rights of a full Citizen (to vote, and hold public office) must be earned through some form of volunteer Federal service. Those residents who have not exercised their right to perform this Federal Service retain the other rights generally associated with a modern democracy (free speech, assembly, etc.), but they cannot vote or hold public office. This structure arose ''ad hoc'' after the collapse of the 20th century Western democracies, brought on by both social failures at home (and by extension, the poor handling of ]) and military defeat by the Chinese Hegemony overseas<!-- (assumed looking forward into the late 20th century from the time the novel was written in the late 1950s) -->.<ref name="weuve">{{cite web|url=http://www.kentaurus.com/troopers.htm| title=Thoughts on Starship Troopers| first=Chris| last=Weuve| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref>


''Starship Troopers'' is narrated by the main protagonist Juan "Johnny" Rico, a member of the "Mobile Infantry". It is one of the few Heinlein novels which intersperses his typical linear narrative structure with a series of flashbacks.<ref name="Gifford"/>{{sfn|Panshin|1968|loc=chpt. 5, sec. 5}} These flashbacks are frequently to Rico's "History and Moral Philosophy" course in school, in which the teacher discusses the history of the structure of their society.<ref name="Gifford"/><ref name="JW"/> Rico is depicted as a man of ]. He is from a wealthy family, whose members had never served in the military.<ref name="Gifford"/><ref name="Magill"/>{{sfn|Franklin|1980|p=111}} Rico's ancestry is depicted as inconsequential, society having finally abandoned racial and gender-based prejudice.<ref name="Magill"/>
In the next section of the novel Rico goes to boot camp at Camp ], on the northern prairies. Five chapters are spent exploring Rico's experience entering the service under the training of his instructor, career Ship's Sergeant Charles Zim. Camp Currie is so rigorous that less than ten percent of the recruits finish basic training; the rest either resign, are expelled, or die in training. One of the chapters deals with Ted Hendrick, a fellow recruit and constant complainer who is flogged and expelled for striking a superior officer (he caught Sgt. Zim by surprise). Another recruit, a deserter who murdered a baby girl while ], is hanged by his battalion. Rico himself is flogged for poor handling of (simulated) ]s during a drill; despite these experiences he eventually graduates and is assigned to a unit.


==Plot==
At some point during Rico's training, the 'Bug War' has begun to brew, and Rico finds himself taking part in combat operations. The war "officially" starts with an Arachnid attack that annihilates the city of ] (which kills Juan's mother), although Rico makes it clear that prior to the attack there were plenty of "'incidents,' 'patrols,' or 'police actions.'"<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=Starship Troopers| year=1987| page= 131|isbn=1156855438}}</ref> Rico briefly describes the Terran Federation's loss at the Battle of Klendathu where his unit is decimated and his ship destroyed. Following Klendathu, the Terran Federation is reduced to making hit-and-run raids similar to the one described at the beginning of the novel (which, chronologically would be placed between Chapters 10 and 11). Rico meanwhile finds himself posted to Rasczak's Roughnecks. This part of the book focuses on the daily routine of military life, as well as the relationship between officers and non-commissioned officers, personified in this case by Rasczak and Sergeant Jelal.
The novel opens with Rico aboard the corvette transport ''Rodger Young'' (named after real life ] recipient ]),{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=345–352}} serving with the platoon known as "Rasczak's Roughnecks". The platoon carries out a raid against a planetary colony held by Skinnies.<ref name="Magill"/> The raid is relatively brief: the platoon lands on the planet, destroys its targets, and retreats, suffering two casualties in the process. One of them, Dizzy Flores, is rescued by Rico but dies while returning to orbit.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|loc=chpt. 1}} The narrative then flashes back to Rico's graduation from high school. Rico and his best friend Carl are considering joining the Federal Service after graduation; Rico is hesitant, partly due to his father's attitude towards the military.<ref name="Gifford"/> Rico makes his decision after discovering that his classmate Carmen Ibañez also intends to enlist.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|p=26-45}}


Rico's choice is taken poorly by his parents, and he leaves with a sense of estrangement. He is assigned to the Mobile Infantry, and moves to Camp Arthur Currie (named for ] who rose through the ranks to general in ]) on the Canadian prairie for his training under Sergeant Charles Zim.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=50–61}} The training is extremely demanding.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=217}} Rico receives combat training of all types, including simulated fights in armored suits.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=80–95}}{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=105–110}} A fellow recruit is court-martialed, flogged, and dismissed for striking a drill instructor who was also his company commander. Rico himself is given five lashes for firing a rocket during a drill with armored suits and simulated nuclear weapons without ensuring that no friendlies were within the blast zone, which in combat would have resulted in the death of a fellow soldier.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=130–140}} Another recruit, who murdered a baby girl after deserting the army, is hanged by his battalion after his arrest by civilian police.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=130–140}} Disheartened, Rico thinks of resigning when he receives a letter from Jean Dubois, who taught Rico ].{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=95–105}} Dubois reveals that he was once a ] in the Mobile Infantry, which gives Rico the motivation not to resign.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=120–130}} After further training at another camp near ], Rico graduates with 187 others, of the 2,009 who had begun training in that regiment.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=165–175}}
Eventually, Rico decides to become a career soldier and attends ], which turns out to be just like boot camp, only "squared and cubed with books added."<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=Starship Troopers| year=1987| page= 172|isbn=1156855438}}</ref> Rico is commissioned a temporary Third Lieutenant as a field-test final exam and commands his own unit during Operation Royalty; eventually he graduates as a Second Lieutenant and full-fledged officer.


The "Bug War" has changed from minor incidents to a full-scale war during Rico's training. An Arachnid attack that annihilates the city of ] alerts civilians to the situation; Rico's mother is killed in the attack.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=170–190}} Rico participates in the Battle of Klendathu, an attack on the Arachnid's home world, which turns into a disastrous defeat for the Terran Federation.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=175–185}} Rico's ship, the ''Valley Forge'', is destroyed, and his unit is decimated; he is reassigned to the Roughnecks on board the ''Rodger Young,'' led by Lieutenant Rasczak and Sergeant Jelal.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=180–190}} The unit carries out several raids, and Rico is promoted to corporal by Jelal after Rasczak dies in combat.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=187–200}}
There is also the account of a meeting between Rico and his father, who has joined up since Rico's mother was killed at Buenos Aires. The final chapter serves as more of a coda, depicting Rico aboard the ''Rodger Young'' as the lieutenant in command of Rico's Roughnecks, preparing to drop to Klendathu as part of a major strike, his father being his sergeant and a Third Lieutenant-in-training (James Bearpaw, known as "Jimmie") of his own under his wing.


One of his comrades in the Roughnecks suggests that Rico go to officer training school and try to become an officer. Rico ends up going to see Jelal, and finds that Jelal already had the paperwork ready. Rico enters ] for a second course of training, including further courses in "History and Moral Philosophy".{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=205–215}}{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=240–250}} En route from the Roughnecks to the school Rico encounters his father who has also enlisted and is now a corporal, and the two reconcile. He is also visited in school by Carmen, now an ensign and ship's pilot officer in the Navy, and the two discuss their friend Carl, who had been killed earlier in the war.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|loc=chpt. 12}}
==Major themes==
=== Politics ===
''Starship Troopers'' is a political essay as well as a novel. Large portions of the book take place in classrooms, with Rico and other characters engaged in debates with their ''History and Moral Philosophy'' teachers, who are often thought to be speaking in Heinlein's voice.{{fact|date=March 2011}} The overall theme of the book is that social responsibility requires being prepared to make individual sacrifice. Heinlein's Terran Federation is a limited democracy with aspects of a ] based on willingness to sacrifice in the common interest. ] belongs only to those willing to serve their society by at least two years of volunteer Federal Service – "the franchise is today limited to discharged veterans", (ch. XII), instead of anyone "...who is 18 years old and has a body temperature near 37&nbsp;°C"<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=Expanded Universe| page=485|isbn=0448119161}}</ref> The Federation is required to find a place for ''anyone'' who desires to serve, regardless of his skill or aptitude (this also includes service ranging from teaching to dangerous non-military work such as serving as experimental medical test subjects).


Rico is commissioned a temporary third lieutenant for his final test: a posting to a combat unit. Under the tutelage of his company commander, Captain Blackstone, and with the aid of his platoon sergeant, his boot camp drill instructor Fleet Sergeant Zim, Rico commands a platoon during "Operation Royalty," a raid to capture members of the Arachnid brain caste and queens.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|loc=chpt. 13}} Rico then returns to the officer school to graduate.
There is an explicitly-made contrast to the democracies of the 20th century, which according to the novel, collapsed because "people had been led to believe that they could simply vote for whatever they wanted... and get it, without toil, without sweat, without tears."<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=Starship Troopers| year=1987| page=93|isbn=1156855438}}</ref> Indeed, Colonel Dubois criticizes as unrealistic the famous ] line concerning "]". No one can stop anyone from pursuing happiness, but life and liberty are said to exist only if they are deliberately sought and paid for.


The novel ends with him holding the rank of second lieutenant, in command of his old platoon in the ''Rodger Young'', with his father as his platoon sergeant. The platoon has been renamed "Rico's Roughnecks", and is about to participate in an attack on Klendathu.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|loc=chpt. 14}}
''Starship Troopers'' is also widely-regarded as a vehicle for Heinlein's ] views. Characters attack ] (a "pompous fraud"), the ] ("All the work one cares to add will not turn a mud pie into an apple tart..."),<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=Starship Troopers| year=1987| page=92|isbn=1156855438}}</ref> and ]'s '']'' ("ant-like communism" and "weird in the extreme").<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=Starship Troopers| year=1987| page= 181|isbn=1156855438}}</ref>


==Themes==
===Military history, traditions, and military science===
]
The ] ended only five years before Heinlein began writing ''Starship Troopers'', and the book makes several direct references to it, such as the claim that "no ']' ever won a war."<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=''Starship Troopers''| year=1987| page=133|isbn=1156855438}}</ref> Heinlein also refers to the American ] taken in that conflict, including the popular accusations of Communist ].<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=''Starship Troopers''| year=1987| page=184|isbn=1156855438}}</ref> After the Korean War ended, there were rumors that the Chinese and North Koreans continued to hold a large number of Americans.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.dtic.mil/dpmo/pmkor/index.htm| title=DPMO: Korean War Missing Personnel| accessdate=March 4, 2006|archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20060403215104/http://www.dtic.mil/dpmo/pmkor/index.htm |archivedate = April 3, 2006|deadurl=yes}}. Similar accusations would be made during the Vietnam and Gulf Wars.</ref> Rico's ''History and Moral Philosophy'' class at Officer Candidate School has a long discussion about whether it is moral to never leave a single man behind, even at the risk of starting a new war. Rico debates whether it was worth it to risk two nations' futures over a single man who might not even deserve to live, but concludes it "doesn't matter whether it's a thousand – or just one, sir. You fight."<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=''Starship Troopers''| year=1987| page=178|isbn=1156855438}}</ref>


Commentators have written that ''Starship Troopers'' is not driven by its plot, though it contains scenes of military combat. Instead, much of the novel is given over to a discussion of ideas.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=215}} In particular, the discussion of political views is a recurring feature of what scholar Jeffrey Cass described as an "ideologically intense" book.{{sfn|Cass|1999|p=52}} A 1997 review in '']'' categorized it as a "]".<ref name="Salon"/> Critics have debated to what extent the novel promotes Heinlein's own political views. Some contend that the novel maintains a sense of irony that allows readers to draw their own conclusions; others argue that Heinlein is sermonizing throughout the book, and that its purpose is to expound Heinlein's militaristic philosophy.{{sfn|Cass|1999|p=52}}<ref name="JW"/>
Several references are made to other wars: these include the name of the starship that collided with '']'', '']'', a major battleground in ], as well as Rico's boot camp, Camp Arthur Currie (named after Sir ] who commanded the ] during that war); a brief reference is also made to Camp ], named after a Canadian recipient of the ] in World War II. The airport was the location of the U.S. Army Air Corps' Walla Walla Army Air Base in World War II. ] lays claim to being the first Army Air Forces outfit to utilize that base. Another World War I reference was the phrase "Come on, you apes! You wanna live forever?", which comes from ] ] at the ] (Although instead of "apes", Daly said "sons of bitches"). This phrase, however, has been attributed to various people throughout military history, including perhaps the earliest documented citation by ] when he was meant to have said "]?" at the ]. The '']'' was named after the World War II ] recipient, and the lines from the chorus of ]'s '']'' is used as the ship's recognition signal. Another war reference, this one from the ], is the implications of the ] of Third Lieutenant ], which are discussed in some detail.


===Militarism===
==Military innovations==
''Starship Troopers'' has been identified as being a part of a tradition in US science fiction that assumes that violent conflict and the militarization of society are inevitable and necessary.{{sfn|Suvin|2008|p=122}} Although the Mobile Infantry, the unit to which Rico is assigned, is seen as a lowly post by the characters in the story, the novel itself suggests that it is the heart of the army and the most honorable unit in it.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=217}} In a commentary written in 1980, Heinlein agreed that ''Starship Troopers'' "glorifies the military{{spaces}}... Specifically the P.B.I., the ], the mudfoot who places his frail body between his loved home and the war's desolation{{snd}}but is rarely appreciated{{spaces}}... he has the toughest job of all and should be honored."{{sfn|Heinlein|2003|p=484}} The story is based on the ] idea of society as a struggle for survival based on military strength. It suggests that some conflicts must be resolved by force: one of the lessons Rico is repeatedly taught is that violence can be an effective method of settling conflict.<ref name="Magill"/> These suggestions derive in part from Heinlein's view that in the 1950s the US government was being too conciliatory in its dealings with communist China and the Soviet Union.<ref name="Goss"/>{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=215}}{{sfn|Macleod|2003|pp=232–233}}{{sfn|King|1998|p=1021}}
{{further|]}}
In addition to Heinlein's political views, ''Starship Troopers'' popularized a number of military concepts and innovations, some of which have inspired real life research. The novel's most noted innovation is the ] ]s used by the Mobile Infantry.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20010630/bob8.asp| archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20060116201552/http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20010630/bob8.asp| archivedate=January 16, 2006| title=Dances with Robots| publisher=Science News Online| accessdate=March 4, 2006| first=Peter| last=Weiss}}</ref> These suits were controlled by the wearer's own movements, but powerfully augmented a soldier's strength, speed, weight carrying capacity (which allowed much heavier personal armament), jumping ability (including jet and rocket boost assistance), and provided the wearer with improved senses (infrared vision and ], ], and amplified hearing), a completely ] including a drug-dispensing apparatus, sophisticated communications equipment, and tactical map displays. Their powered armor made the Mobile Infantry a hybrid between an infantry unit and an ].


Heinlein draws an analogy between the human society in the novel, which is well-to-do but needs to be vigilant against the imperialist threat of the Arachnids, and US society of the 1950s. Reviewers have suggested that the Arachnids are Heinlein's analogue for communists. Traits used to support this include the communal nature of the Arachnids, which makes them capable of a much higher degree of coordination than the humans. Bug society is once explicitly described as communist, and is moreover depicted as communist by nature; this has been read as implying that those with a different political ideology are analogous to alien beings.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=218}}<ref name="Magill"/><ref name=Cooke/> The related motifs of alien invasion, patriotism, and personal sacrifice during war, are present, as are other aspects of US popular culture of the 1950s.<ref name="Goss">{{cite journal|last1=Goss|first1=Jasper|title=Reviewed Work(s): Starship Troopers by Robert A. Heinlein; Starship Troopers by PaulVerhoeven|journal=Australasian Journal of American Studies|date=Jul 1998|volume=17|issue=1|pages=54–56|jstor=41415952}}</ref> Commentators have argued that Heinlein's portrayal of aliens, as well as being a reference to 1950s communist countries, aims to "reinscribe the ideologies of America's mythic ] history". The concept of the frontier includes a social-Darwinist argument of constantly fighting for survival, even at the expense of indigenous people or, in the case of ''Starship Troopers'', of aliens. Heinlein suggests that without territorial expansion involving violent conquest of other races, humans would be destroyed.{{sfn|King|1998|pp=1022–1023}} Scholar Jamie King has stated that Heinlein does not address the question of what the military government and Federal Service would do in peacetime, and argues that Heinlein has set up a society designed to be continuously at war, and to keep expanding its territory.{{sfn|King|1998|p=1024}}
Another concept the book pioneered was that of "space-borne infantry". The heavily mechanized units of M.I. troops were attached to interstellar troop transport spacecraft, which then delivered them to planetary target zones, by dropping groups of Mobile Infantrymen onto the planet surface from orbit via individual re-entry capsules (hence the book's slang term "cap troopers" for M.I. troops). The uses for such a force—ranging from smash-and-burn raids, to ]s, conventional infantry warfare, and holding beachheads—and the tactics that might be employed by such soldiers are described extensively within the novel. The tactics, training, and many other aspects of this futuristic elite force are carefully detailed: everything from the function of the armored suits themselves, to the need for multiple variants of powered armor, to the training of personnel in both suit operations and the specialized unit tactics that would be needed, to the operational use of the suits in combat.


===Coming of age===
==Popularity with U.S. military==
''Starship Troopers'' has been referred to as a ] or "]" story for Rico, as he matures through his tenure in the infantry. His training, both at boot camp and at officer candidate school, involves learning the value of ], thus inviting the reader to learn it as well.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=217}} This is especially true of the parts of his training that involve indoctrination, such as the claim by one of his instructors that rule by military veterans is the ideal form of government, because only they understand how to put collective well-being above the individual.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=217}} The story traces Rico's transformation from a boy into a soldier, while exploring issues of identity and motivation,<ref name="JW"/> and traces his overall moral and social development, in a manner identified by commentators as similar to many stories about German soldiers in ].{{sfn|Crim|2010|p=108}} Rico's transformation has been likened to the common narrative within stories with military themes by scholar ]. This typical narrative is that of a sloppy and unfit civilian being knocked into shape by tough officers, whose training is "calculated sadism" but is depicted as fundamentally being on the right side.{{sfn|Franklin|1980|p=111}} The letter Rico receives from Dubois, partly responsible for Rico "crossing the hump" with his training, is shown as a turning point in his development.<ref name="Magill"/> The classroom scenes embedded in the story serve to explain Rico's adventures, and highlight his reactions to events around. A notable example is the execution Rico is forced to witness after a deserter from his unit murders a young girl; Rico is uncertain of his own reaction until he remembers a lecture by Dubois in which the latter argues that "moral sense" derives entirely from the will to survive.<ref name="Magill"/>{{sfn|Slusser|1986|p=68}} The concept of the American frontier is also related to the coming-of-age theme. Young protagonists across Heinlein's novels attain manhood by confronting a hostile "wilderness" in space; coming-of-age in a military, alien context is a common theme in Heinlein's earlier works as well.{{sfn|King|1998|pp=1019–1021}} Rico's coming-of-age has also been described as being related to his relationship with his father; the journey "outward" through the novel also contains a search for Rico's childhood and a reunion with his estranged parent.{{sfn|Slusser|1986|p=21}}
While powered armor is ''Starship Troopers''' most famous legacy, its influence extends deep into contemporary warfare. Over half a century after its publication, ''Starship Troopers'' is on the reading lists of the ],<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.marines.mil/almars/almar2000.nsf/0/91c8a9b3b9a2b59785256a55005e129d?OpenDocument| archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20060222120250/http://www.marines.mil/almars/almar2000.nsf/0/91c8a9b3b9a2b59785256a55005e129d?OpenDocument| archivedate=February 22, 2006| title=ALMAR 246/96| year=1996| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://home.comcast.net/~antaylor1/usmccommandant.html| title=Commandant of the US Marine Corps: Official Reading List| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.lejeune.usmc.mil/2dmardiv/26/three.html| archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20051219025149/http://www.lejeune.usmc.mil/2dmardiv/26/three.html| archivedate=December 19, 2005| title=2nd Battalion, 6th Marines. Battalion Commander's Reading List| accessdate=March 27, 2010}}</ref> and the ].<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.navyreading.navy.mil/details.aspx?q=111| title=Junior Enlisted Reading List| accessdate=May 6, 2009}}</ref> It is the first science fiction novel on the reading lists at three of the five ] branches. When Heinlein wrote ''Starship Troopers'' the ] was a largely ] force, with conscripts serving two year hitches. Today the U.S. military has incorporated many ideas similar to Heinlein's concept of an all-volunteer, high-tech strike force. In addition, references to the book keep appearing in military culture. In 2002 a Marine general described the future of Marine Corps clothing and equipment as needing to emulate the Mobile Infantry.<ref>Brig. Gen. James M. Feigley, Marine Corps Systems Command. Quoted in {{cite web|url=http://www.navyleague.org/seapower/last_ounce_of_combat_readiness.htm| title=The Last Ounce of Combat Readiness| first=Arthur P. Jr.| last=Brill| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref>


==Controversy== ===Moral decline===
''Starship Troopers'' also critiques US society of the 1950s, suggesting that it led young people to be spoiled and undisciplined. These beliefs are expressed through the classroom lectures of Dubois, Rico's teacher for History and Moral Philosophy. Dubois praises ] and other types of ] as a means of addressing juvenile crimes. It has been suggested that Heinlein endorsed this view, although the fact that Dubois also compares raising children to training a puppy has been used to argue that Heinlein was making use of ].{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|pp=215–216}} The story is strongly in favor of corporal punishment and capital punishment, as a means of correcting ]s, part of a trend in science fiction which examines technology and outer space in an innovative manner, but is reactionary with respect to human relationships.<ref name=EOLAIS>{{cite encyclopedia|editor-last1=Kent|editor-first1=Allen|editor-last2=Lancour|editor-first2=Harold|editor-last3=Daily|editor-first3=Jay E.|encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science: Volume 29|publisher=]|title=Stories|last=Daily|first=Jay E.|year=1980|isbn=9780824720292|page=151|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8WOFlMCzqEIC|access-date=February 16, 2016|archive-date=March 13, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230313134031/https://books.google.com/books?id=8WOFlMCzqEIC|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name=JH/> As with other books by Heinlein, traditional schools are denigrated, while learning "on the spot" is extolled: Rico is able to master the things required of him in military training without undue difficulty.<ref name="Magill"/>
To Heinlein's surprise,<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=Expanded Universe| page=482|isbn=0448119161}}. "I still can't see how that book got a Hugo."</ref> ''Starship Troopers'' won the ] in 1960.<ref name="WWE-1960"/> By 1980, twenty years after its release, it had been translated into eleven different languages and was still selling strongly. However, Heinlein complained that, despite this success, almost all the mail he received about it was negative and he only heard about it "when someone wants to chew me out."<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=''Expanded Universe''| page=482|isbn=0448119161}}</ref>


Dubois also ridicules the idea of ], such as "]", arguing that people have only the rights that they are willing to fight and die for to protect.{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|pp=145–150}}{{sfn|Slusser|1986|p=68}}{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=216}} The novel appeals to scientific authority to justify this position; Dubois repeatedly states that his argument is mathematically demonstrable, statements which have led scholars to label the novel "]", despite its social and political themes.{{sfn|Slusser|1986|pp=67–69}} The "moral decline" caused by this situation is depicted as having caused a global war between an alliance of the US, Britain, and Russia against the "Chinese Hegemony" in the year 1987. Despite the alliance between the US and Russia, this war has been described as demonstrating Heinlein's anti-communist beliefs, which saw "swarming hordes" of Chinese as a bigger threat. The novel draws some comparisons between the Chinese and the Arachnids, and suggests that the lessons of one war could be applied to the other.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=216}}
===Literary critiques===
The main literary criticism against ''Starship Troopers'' is that it is nothing more than a vehicle for Heinlein's political views. ] compared it to a "Victorian children's book"<ref name="PITFCS">{{cite web| url=http://www.enter.net/~torve/critics/PITFCS/pitfcsintro.html| title=Starship Troopers: The PITFCS Debate| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref> while ], founder of '']'', remarked that Heinlein had "forgotten to insert a story."<ref name=PITFCS/> ] complained that the novel was overly simplistic—" account of the making of a ... and nothing more"<ref name="Panshin">{{cite web|last=Panshin| first=Alexei| url=http://www.enter.net/~torve/critics/Dimension/hdcontents.html| title= Heinlein in Dimension| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref>—and that the characters were simply mouthpieces for Heinlein: "At the end you know nothing of tastes, his likes and dislikes, his personal life. The course of the book changes him in no way because there is nothing to change – Rico remains first and last a voice reading lines about how nice it is to be a soldier.... The other characters are even more sketchy, or are simple expositions of an attitude."<ref name=Panshin/> Richard Geib adds "The real life 'warriors' I have known are all more multi-faceted than anyone we meet in ''Starship Troopers''. And the ones I know who have killed are much more ambivalent about having done so."<ref name="Geib">{{cite web|last=Geib| first=Richard| url=http://www.rjgeib.com/thoughts/athens/robert-heinlein.html| title="''STARSHIP TROOPERS''" by Robert A. Heinlein. An opinion.| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref> He further complained about the almost complete lack of sexuality among the characters and the absence of any serious romance.<ref name=Geib/>


==Reception==
In his review column for '']'', ] selected the novel as one of the 10 best genre books of 1959.<ref>"Books", '']'', April 1960, p.98</ref>
To Heinlein's surprise,{{sfn|Heinlein|2003|p=482}} ''Starship Troopers'' won the ] in 1960.<ref name="WWE-1960">{{cite web |url= http://www.worldswithoutend.com/books_year_index.asp?year=1960 |title= 1960 Award Winners & Nominees |work= Worlds Without End |access-date= July 27, 2009 |archive-date= November 1, 2021 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20211101225940/http://www.worldswithoutend.com/books_year_index.asp?year=1960 |url-status= live }}</ref> It has been acknowledged as one of the best-known and most influential works of science fiction.{{sfn|Macleod|2003|p=231}}<ref name="Liptak">{{cite news|last1=Liptak|first1=Andrew|title=Four things that we want to see in the Starship Troopers reboot|url=https://www.theverge.com/2016/11/3/13511716/starship-troopers-reboot-things-we-want-to-see|access-date=May 9, 2017|work=The Verge|date=November 3, 2016|archive-date=March 8, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210308213929/https://www.theverge.com/2016/11/3/13511716/starship-troopers-reboot-things-we-want-to-see|url-status=live}}</ref> The novel is considered a landmark for the genre, having been described by a 1960 review as one of the ten best genre books of 1959,<ref>{{cite journal|last=Knight|first=Damon|title=Books|journal=]|date=April 1960|page=98}}</ref> in a 2009 review as a key science fiction novel of the 1950s,{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|pp=155–156}} and as the best-known example of ].{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|pp=102}} The novel has been described as marking Heinlein's transition from writing juvenile fiction to a "more mature phase" as an author.<ref name="Hubble"/> Reviewing the book with others written for children, ] of '']'' wrote in 1960 that "Heinlein has penned a juvenile that ''really'' is not. This is a new and bitter and disillusioned Heinlein". Rating it 2.5 stars out of five for children, 4.5 stars for adults, and "?" for civilians, he believed that the novel would be "of exceptional interest to veterans with battle experience{{spaces}}... but youngsters will find it melancholy and verbose".<ref name="gale196010">{{Cite magazine |last=Gale |first=Floyd C. |date=October 1960 |title=Galaxy's 5 Star Shelf |url=https://archive.org/stream/Galaxy_v19n01_1960-10#page/n71/mode/1up |magazine=Galaxy Science Fiction |pages=142–146}}</ref> Conversely, ] described it as Heinlein's last "straight" science fiction, before he turned to more serious writing such as ''Stranger in a Strange Land''.<ref name=Moorcock>{{cite journal |last= Moorcock |first= Michael |url= http://flag.blackened.net/liberty/moorcock.html |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20021224193414/http://flag.blackened.net/liberty/moorcock.html |archive-date= December 24, 2002 |title= Starship Stormtroopers |access-date=March 4, 2006 |journal= Cienfuegos Press Anarchist Review |volume=4 |year=1978 |orig-year= May 1977}}</ref>


By 1980, twenty years after its release, ''Starship Troopers'' had been translated into eleven languages and was still selling strongly. Heinlein nevertheless complained that, despite this success, almost all the mail he received about it was negative and he only heard about it "when someone wants to chew me out".{{sfn|Heinlein|2003|p=482}} The novel is highly contentious.<ref name="Hubble">{{cite book |last1= Hubble |first1= Nick |last2= Mousoutzanis |first2= Aris |title= The Science Fiction Handbook |date= 2013 |publisher= Bloomsbury |page= 47 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=cVAQAgAAQBAJ |location= ], UK |isbn= 978-1-4725-3897-0 |access-date= September 15, 2017 |archive-date= March 13, 2023 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20230313134032/https://books.google.com/books?id=cVAQAgAAQBAJ |url-status= live }}</ref> Controversy surrounded its praise of the military and approval of violence, to the extent that it has frequently been described as ], and its implication that militarism is superior to traditional democracy.<ref name="Hubble"/>{{sfn|Crim|2010|p=104}} Heinlein's peers were among those who argued over the book; a comparison between a quote in ''Starship Troopers'' that "the noblest fate that a man can endure is to place his own mortal body between his loved home and war's desolation"{{sfn|Heinlein|1987|p=91}} and the anti-war poem "]" by ] began a two-year discussion in the ''Proceedings of the Institute for Twenty-First Century Studies'' from 1959 to 1961, with ], ], ], ], ], ], among those debating ''Starship Troopers''{{'}}s quality of writing, philosophy, and morality.<ref name="PITFCS">{{cite web |url= http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/pitfcsintro.html |title= Starship Troopers: The PITFCS Debate|work=Proceedings of the Institute for Twenty-First Century Studies|access-date=March 4, 2006|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131226110421/http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/pitfcsintro.html|archive-date= December 26, 2013}}</ref>
By contrast, in a 2009 retrospective, ] finds ''Starship Troopers'' "military SF done extremely well."<ref name=JW> by ]</ref> "Heinlein was absolutely at his peak when he wrote this in 1959. He had so much technical stylistic mastery of the craft of writing science fiction that he could do something like this and get away with it." "It’s astonishing that still controversial now, fifty years after it was first published," and "Probably have been delighted at how much the book has made people think and argue."<ref name=JW/>


The writing in ''Starship Troopers'' has received varied responses, with the scenes of military training and combat receiving praise. In a 2009 retrospective, science-fiction writer ] wrote that ''Starship Troopers'' was "military SF done extremely well".<ref name=JW>{{cite web |url= http://www.tor.com/2009/03/05/over-the-hump-robert-a-heinleins-starship-troopers/ |first= Jo |last= Walton |title= Over the hump: Robert A. Heinlein's Starship Troopers |publisher= ] |date= March 5, 2009 |access-date= March 15, 2017 |archive-date= November 1, 2021 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20211101084428/https://www.tor.com/2009/03/05/over-the-hump-robert-a-heinleins-starship-troopers/ |url-status= live }}</ref> She went on to argue that "Heinlein was absolutely at his peak when he wrote this in 1959. He had so much technical stylistic mastery of the craft of writing science fiction that he could ']' and get away with it."<ref name=JW/> Others referred to it as very readable, and found the military scenes compelling.<ref name="Hubble"/><ref name=Myers/>{{sfn|Macleod|2003|p=233}} Heinlein's descriptions of training and boot camp in the novel, based on his own experiences in the military, have been described as being rendered with remarkable skill.<ref name="Goss"/> A 1960 review in the '']'' praised the "brilliantly written" passages describing infantry combat, and also called attention to the discussion of weapons and armor,<ref name=Boucher/> which, according to other reviewers, demonstrated Heinlein's "undiminished talent for invention".<ref name="Magill"/> Scholar ] described the book in 1986 as the "ultimately convincing space-war epic", praising in particular the "precisely imagined" weapons and tactics,{{sfn|Slusser|1986|p=21}} while a 1979 science fiction encyclopedia referred to it as the "slickest" of Heinlein's juvenile books.<ref name="Magill"/>
===Allegations of militarism===
Another complaint about ''Starship Troopers'' is that it is either inherently militaristic or pro-military. There was a two-year debate in the ''Proceedings of the Institute for Twenty-First Century Studies'' (PITFCS) that was sparked by a comparison between a quote in ''Starship Troopers'' that "the noblest fate that a man can endure is to place his own mortal body between his loved home and war's desolation"<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=''Starship Troopers''| year=1987| page= 91|isbn=1156855438}}</ref> (paraphrase of the fourth stanza of "]") and the anti-war poem "]" by ].<ref name=PITFCS/> ] called it "a book-length recruiting poster."<ref name=PITFCS/> ], a veteran of the peacetime military, argued that Heinlein glossed over the reality of military life, and that the Terran Federation-Arachnid conflict existed simply because, "Starship troopers are not half so glorious sitting on their butts polishing their weapons for the tenth time for lack of anything else to do."<ref name=Panshin/> ], a Vietnam veteran and author of the anti-war ]<ref name="WWE-1976">{{cite web
|url=http://www.worldswithoutend.com/books_year_index.asp?year=1976
|title=1976 Award Winners & Nominees
|work=Worlds Without End
|accessdate=July 27, 2009}}</ref>- and ]<ref name="WWE-1975">{{cite web
|url=http://www.worldswithoutend.com/books_year_index.asp?year=1975
|title=1975 Award Winners & Nominees
|work=Worlds Without End
|accessdate=July 27, 2009}}</ref>-winning science fiction novel '']'', similarly complained that ''Starship Troopers'' unnecessarily glorifies war.<ref name="Haldeman">{{cite web|last=Haldeman| first=Joe| url=http://www.scifi.com/transcripts/1998/JoeHaldeman.html| archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20060315063638/http://www.scifi.com/transcripts/1998/JoeHaldeman.html| archivedate=March 15, 2006| title= 1998 SciFi.com interview| year=1998| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref>


Criticism of the style of the book has centered on its political aspects. Heinlein's discussions of his political beliefs were criticized as "didactic",<ref name=Myers/><ref name=Boucher/>{{sfn|Suvin|2008|p=124}} and the novel was derided for "exposition inserted in large indigestible chunks".<ref name=Boucher/> Author ]'s 2003 analysis of the political nature of ''Starship Troopers'' stated that it was "a book where civics infodumps and accounts of brutal boot-camp training far outweigh the thin and tensionless combat scenes".{{sfn|Macleod|2003|p=233}} Scientist and author Brunner compared it to a "Victorian children's book",<ref name=Brunner>{{cite journal|title=John Brunner Says |journal=The Proceedings of the Institute for Twenty-First Century Studies |date=December 1960 |volume=138 |url=http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/138brunner.html |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131227004304/http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/138brunner.html |archive-date=December 27, 2013 }}</ref> while the ''Science Fiction Handbook'' published in 2009 said that the novel provided "compelling images of a futuristic military" and that it raised important questions, even for those who disagree with its political ideology. However, it stated that the story was weak as a tale of an alien encounter, as it did not explore alien society in any detail, but presented the Arachnids as nameless and faceless creatures that wished to destroy humanity.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=221}} Boucher, founder of '']'', remarked in 1960 that Heinlein had "forgotten to insert a story".<ref name=Boucher>{{cite journal|title=Tony Boucher Says |journal=The Proceedings of the Institute for Twenty-First Century Studies |date=February 1960 |volume=133 |url=http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/133boucher.html |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131227004151/http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/133boucher.html |archive-date=December 27, 2013 }}</ref> A 1979 summary said that though Heinlein's vision might verge on fascism, his tightly controlled narrative made his ideology seem "vibrantly appealing".<ref name="Magill"/>
Defending Heinlein, George Price argued that " implies, first, that war is something 'endured,' not enjoyed, and second, that war is so unpleasant, so desolate, that it must at all costs be kept away from one's home."<ref name=PITFCS/> In a commentary on his essay "Who Are the Heirs of Patrick Henry?", Heinlein agreed that ''Starship Troopers'' "glorifies the military ... Specifically the P.B.I., the ], the mudfoot who places his frail body between his loved home and the war's desolation – but is rarely appreciated... he has the toughest job of all and should be honored."<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=''Expanded Universe''| page=484|isbn=0448119161}}</ref> The book's dedication also reads in part "... to all sergeants everywhere who have labored to make men out of boys."<ref>Berkley Medallion paperback edition. The 's "Heinlein’s Dedications" incorrectly uses the "anywhere" word instead of "everywhere".</ref> Heinlein also received some complaints about the lack of conscription in ''Starship Troopers'' (the military draft was the law in the United States when he wrote the novel).<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=''Expanded Universe''| pages=483–484|isbn=0448119161}}</ref>

===Criticism of militarism===
''Starship Troopers'' is generally considered to promote militarism, the glorification of war and of the military.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|pp=155–156}} Scholar Bruce Franklin referred to it in 1980 as a "bugle-blowing, drum-beating glorification" of military service, and wrote that militarism and imperialism were the explicit message of the book.{{sfn|Franklin|1980|pp=111–112}}<ref name="Intersections"/> Science fiction writer ] called it "a book-length recruiting poster".<ref name=Mclaughlin>{{cite journal|title=Dean McLaughlin Says Says |journal=The Proceedings of the Institute for Twenty-First Century Studies |date=March 1960 |volume=134 |url=http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/134mclaughlin.html |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131227004156/http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/134mclaughlin.html |archive-date=December 27, 2013 }}</ref> In 1968 science fiction critic ] called ''Starship Troopers'' a militaristic ] and compared it to a recruiting film, stating that it "purports to show the life of a typical soldier, with a soundtrack commentary by earnest sincere Private Jones who interprets what we see for us." Panshin stated that there was no "sustained human conflict" in the book: instead, "All the soldiers we see are tough, smart, competent, cleancut, clean-shaven, and noble."{{sfn|Panshin|1968|loc=chpt. 4, sec. 1}} Panshin, a veteran of the peacetime military, argued that Heinlein glossed over the reality of military life, and that the Terran Federation-Arachnid conflict existed simply because, "Starship troopers are not half so glorious sitting on their butts polishing their weapons for the tenth time for lack of anything else to do."{{sfn|Panshin|1968|loc=chpt. 4, sec. 1}} Literature scholar George Slusser, in describing the novel as "wrong-headed and retrogressive", argued that calling its ideology militarism or imperialism was inadequate, as these descriptions suggested an economic motive. Slusser instead says that Heinlein advocates for a complete "technological subjugation of nature", of which the Arachnids are a symbol, and that this subjugation itself is depicted as a sign of human advancement.<ref name="Intersections"/>

A 1997 review of the film in '']'' stated that the novel could almost be described as propaganda, and was terrifying as a result, particularly in its belief that the ] had to be an ingredient of any civilization. This was described as a highly unusual ]n vision.<ref name="Salon"/> Moorcock stated that the lessons Rico learns in boot camp: "wars are inevitable, that the army is always right".<ref name=Moorcock/> In discussing the book's utility in classroom discussions of the form of government, Alan Myers stated that its depiction of the military was of an "unashamedly Earth-chauvinist nature".<ref name=Myers>{{cite journal |last1=Myers |first1= Alan |title= Science fiction in the classroom |journal= Children's Literature in Education |date=1978 |volume=9 |issue=4 |pages= 182–187 |doi=10.1007/bf01150170|s2cid= 144972508 }}</ref> In the words of science fiction scholar ], ''Starship Troopers'' was an "unsubtle but powerful black-and-white paean to combat life", and an example of ] in favor of military values.{{sfn|Suvin|2008|p=124}}

Other writers defended Heinlein. George Price argued that " implies, first, that war is something endured, not enjoyed, and second, that war is so unpleasant, so desolate, that it must at all costs be kept away from one's home."<ref name=Price>{{cite journal|title=George Price Says |journal=The Proceedings of the Institute for Twenty-First Century Studies |date=October 1960 |volume=137 |url=http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/137price.html |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131227004246/http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/137price.html |archive-date=December 27, 2013 }}</ref> Poul Anderson also defended some of the novel's positions, arguing "Heinlein has recognized the problem of selective versus nonselective franchise, and his proposed solution does merit discussion."<ref name=Anderson>{{cite journal|title=Poul Anderson Says |journal=The Proceedings of the Institute for Twenty-First Century Studies |date=February 1960 |volume=133 |url=http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/133anderson.html |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131227004301/http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/133anderson.html |archive-date=December 27, 2013 }}</ref> Complaints were made against Heinlein for the lack of conscription in ''Starship Troopers''. When he wrote the novel, the ] was still in effect in the US.{{sfn|Heinlein|2003|pp=483–484}}


===Allegations of fascism=== ===Allegations of fascism===
Another accusation is that the Terran Federation is a fascist society, and that ''Starship Troopers'' is therefore an endorsement of fascism. These allegations have become so popular that Sircar's Corollary of ] states that once Heinlein is brought up during online debates, "Nazis or Hitler are mentioned within three days."<ref name="WiredMCM">{{cite web|author=Godwin, Mike|title=Meme, Counter-meme|date=October 1, 2004|work=]| url=http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/2.10/godwin.if.html |accessdate=March 24, 2006|authorlink=Mike Godwin}}</ref>
The most visible proponent of these views is probably ], whose ] of ''Starship Troopers'' portrayed the Terran Federation's personnel wearing uniforms strongly reminiscent of those worn by the ]-era ]; but Verhoeven admits that he never finished reading the actual book.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.space.com/sciencefiction/movies/troopers_contrast_000610.html| title=''Starship Troopers'': Film and Heinlein's Vision| first=Robert| last=Peterson| year=2000| publisher=Space.com| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref> Most of the arguments for this view cite the idea that only veterans can vote and non-veterans lack full citizenship; moreover, only veterans are permitted to teach the course "History & Moral Philosophy", children are taught that moral arguments for the status quo are mathematically correct, and capital punishment is acceptable as a method to teach morality. Federal Service is not necessarily military, although it is suggested that a certain hardship and discipline is pervasive. According to ], Heinlein got the idea not from Nazi Germany or ], but from Switzerland.<ref name="weuve"/>


The society within the book has frequently been described as ].{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|pp=155–156}}{{sfn|Cass|1999|p=52}}<ref name="Goss"/> According to the 2009 ''Science Fiction Handbook'', it had the effect of giving Heinlein a reputation as a "fanatical warmongering fascist".{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=214}} Scholar ] has referred to the setting of the book as "unremittingly grim fascism". He has stated that the novel made an analogy between its military conflict and those of the US after World War II, and that it justified ] in the name of fighting another form of imperialism.{{sfn|Cass|1999|pp=52–53}} ] has referred to it as "]".<ref name="Goss"/> Suvin compares Heinlein's suggestion that "all wars arise from population pressure" to the Nazi concept of '']'' or "living space" for a superior society that was used to justify territorial expansion.{{sfn|Suvin|2008|pp=124–125}}
Defenders of the book usually point out that although the ] is limited, the government of the Terran Federation is ]. There is ], ], and ]. The political system described in the book is ], multi-religious, and multi-ethnic. The protagonist Juan Rico is ] and others in his training group are American, ], Japanese, ], Australian, and Turkish, or ], and one or two have recognizably Jewish last names. Many also argue that Heinlein was simply discussing the merits of a "selective versus nonselective franchise."<ref name=PITFCS/> {{Volume needed|date=March 2011}} Heinlein made a similar claim in his ''Expanded Universe''.<ref>{{cite book|last=Heinlein|title=''Expanded Universe''| page=485|isbn=0448119161}}</ref>{{Volume needed|date=March 2011}}


Some reviewers have suggested that Heinlein was simply discussing the merits of a selective versus a nonselective franchise.<ref name="JW"/> Heinlein made a similar claim, over two decades after ''Starship Troopers'''s publication, in his '']'' and further claimed that 95 percent of "veterans" were not military personnel but members of the civil service.{{sfn|Heinlein|2003|pp=396–404}} Heinlein's own description has been disputed, even among the book's defenders. Heinlein scholar James Gifford has argued that a number of quotes within the novel suggest that the characters within the book assume that the Federal Service is largely military. For instance, when Rico tells his father that he is interested in Federal Service, his father immediately explains his belief that Federal Service is a bad idea because there is no war in progress, indicating that he sees Federal Service as military in nature. Gifford states that although Heinlein's intentions may have been that Federal Service be 95 percent non-military, in relation to the actual contents of the book, Heinlein "is wrong on this point. Flatly so."<ref name=Gifford/>
===Allegations of utopianism===
More recently, the book has been analyzed as a ] (in the sense of a society that does not, and cannot, exist), and that while Heinlein's ideas sound plausible, they have never been put to the test and are, actually, impractical or utopian. This criticism has been leveled by the likes of Robert A. W. Lowndes, ], and ]. The latter wrote an essay entitled "Starship Stormtroopers" in which he attacked Heinlein and other writers over similar "Utopian fiction."<ref>{{cite web|last=Moorcock| first=Michael| url=http://flag.blackened.net/liberty/moorcock.html| archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20021224193414/http://flag.blackened.net/liberty/moorcock.html| archivedate=December 24, 2002| title=Starship Stormtroopers| year=1977| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref> Lowndes accused Heinlein of using ] arguments, "countering ingenuous half-truths with brilliant half-truths."<ref name=PITFCS/> Lowndes further argued that the Terran Federation could never be as idealistic as Heinlein portrays it to be because he never properly addressed "whether or not have at least as full a measure of civil redress against official injustice as we have today".<ref name=PITFCS/> Farmer also agreed, arguing that a "world ruled by veterans would be as mismanaged, graft-ridden, and insane as one ruled by men who had never gotten near the odor of blood and guts."<ref name=PITFCS/>


], writing in 1975, defended ''Starship Troopers'', stating that the society depicted in it did not contain many elements of fascism. He argues that the novel does not include outright opposition to ] and liberalism that would be expected in a fascist society.{{sfn|Cass|1999|pp=52–53}} Others have responded by saying Showalter's argument is based on a literal reading of the novel, and that the story glorifies militarism to a large extent.{{sfn|Cass|1999|pp=52–53}} ] argues that the book does not actually advocate fascism because anybody capable of understanding the oath of Federal Service is able to enlist and thereby obtain political power.{{sfn|Macleod|2003|p=233}} Macleod states that Heinlein's books are consistently liberal, but cover a spectrum from democratic to elitist forms of liberalism, ''Starship Troopers'' being on the latter end of the spectrum.{{sfn|Macleod|2003|p=231}} It has been argued that Heinlein's militarism is more ] than fascist, and that this trend is also present in Heinlein's other popular books of the period, such as '']'' (1961) and '']'' (1966). This period of Heinlein's writing has received more critical attention than any other, although he continued to write into the 1980s.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|pp=155–156}}
However, this issue is still controversial, even among the book's defenders. James Gifford<ref name=Gifford/> points to several quotes as indications that the characters assume Federal Service is military; for instance, when Rico tells his father he is interested in Federal Service, his father immediately explains his belief that Federal Service is a bad idea because there is no war in progress, indicating that he sees Federal Service as military in nature, or not necessary to a businessman during peacetime. Some Federal Service recruiters wear military ribbons, and a term of service "is either real military service... or a most unreasonable facsimile thereof." Moreover, the history of Federal Service describes it as being started by military veterans who did not originally allow civilians to join and are not described as allowing them to join later. Gifford decides, as a result, that although Heinlein's intentions may have been that Federal Service be 95% non-military, in relation to the actual contents of the book, Heinlein "is wrong on this point. Flatly so."


===Allegations of racism=== ===Apparent utopianism===
The setting of the book is presented by Heinlein as utopian; its leaders are shown as good and wise, and the population as free and prosperous.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=214}}<ref name="Magill"/> Slusser wrote in 1987 that ''Starship Troopers'' depicts a world that is "hell for human beings", but nonetheless celebrates the ideology of its fictional society.<ref name="Intersections"/> The rulers are claimed to be the best in history, because they understand that human nature is to fight for power through the use of force.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=217}} The suggestion of utopia is not explored in depth, as the lives of those outside the military are not shown in any detail.<ref name="Magill"/>{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=221}} The novel suggests that the militarist philosophy espoused by many of the characters has a mathematical backing, though reviewers have commented that Heinlein does not present any basis for this.<ref name="JW"/>{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=217}}
The supposedly racist aspects of ''Starship Troopers'' involve the Terrans' relations with the Bugs and the Skinnies. Richard Geib has suggested that Heinlein portrayed the individual Arachnids as lacking "minds or souls... killing them seems no different from stepping on ants."<ref name=Geib/> Both Robert Peterson and John Brunner believe that the nicknames "Bugs" and "Skinnies" carry racial overtones, Brunner using the analogy of "]"<ref name=PITFCS/> while Peterson suggested that "not only does the nickname 'Bugs' for the arachnids of Klendathu sound too much like a racial slur – think of the derogatory use of the word 'Jew' – but Heinlein's characters unswervingly believe that humans are superior to Bugs, and that humans are destined to spread across the galaxy."<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.space.com/sciencefiction/books/troopers_book_000610.html| title=Militarism and Utopia in ''Starship Troopers''| first=Robert| last=Peterson| publisher=Space.com| year=2000| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref>


Writers such as Farmer, Robert A. W. Lowndes, and ] have criticized the novel for being a hypothetical utopia, in the sense that while Heinlein's ideas sound plausible, they have never been put to the test. Moorcock wrote an essay entitled "Starship Stormtroopers" in which he attacked Heinlein and other writers over similar "Utopian fiction".<ref name=Moorcock/> Lowndes accused Heinlein of using ] arguments, "countering ingenuous half-truths with brilliant half-truths".<ref name=Lowndes>{{cite journal|title=In Contrary Motion |journal=The Proceedings of the Institute for Twenty-First Century Studies |date=November 1961 |volume=141 |url=http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/141lowndes.html |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131227004148/http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/141lowndes.html |archive-date=December 27, 2013 }}</ref> Lowndes further argued that the Terran Federation could never be as idealistic as Heinlein portrays it to be because he never properly addressed "whether or not have at least as full a measure of civil redress against official injustice as we have today".<ref name=Lowndes/> Farmer agreed, arguing that a "world ruled by veterans would be as mismanaged, graft-ridden, and insane as one ruled by men who had never gotten near the odor of blood and guts".<ref name=Farmer>{{cite journal|title=Phil Farmer Says |journal=The Proceedings of the Institute for Twenty-First Century Studies |date=March 1961 |volume=139 |url=http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/139farmer.html |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131227004145/http://www.panshin.com/critics/PITFCS/139farmer.html |archive-date=December 27, 2013 }}</ref>
Robert A. W. Lowndes argues that the war between the Terrans and the Arachnids is not about a quest for racial purity, but rather an extension of Heinlein's belief that man is a wild animal. According to this theory, if man lacks a moral compass beyond the will to survive, and he was confronted by another species with a similar lack of morality, then the only possible result would be warfare.<ref name=PITFCS/>


==Cultural influence== ===Race and gender===
Authors and commentators have stated that the manner in which the extraterrestrial beings are portrayed in ''Starship Troopers'' has ] aspects, arguing that the nicknames "Bugs" and "Skinnies" carry racial overtones. ] compared them to calling Koreans "]s".<ref name=Brunner/> Slusser argued that the term "Bugs" was an "abusive and biologically inaccurate" word that justified the violence against alien beings, a tendency which, according to Slusser, the book shared with other commercially successful science fiction.<ref name=Cooke>{{cite encyclopedia|editor-last1=Slusser|editor-first1=George E.|editor-last2=Rabkin|editor-first2=Eric S.|last3=Cooke|first3=Leighton Brett|title=The Human Alien: In-Groups and Outbreeding in Enemy Mine|encyclopedia=Aliens The Anthropology of Science Fiction|date=1987|publisher=Southern Illinois University Press|location=Carbondale, Illinois, US|isbn=0-8093-1375-8|pages=|url=https://archive.org/details/aliensanthropolo00slus_0/page/132}}</ref>
=== Books ===
''Starship Troopers'' influenced many later science fiction stories, setting a tone for the military in space, a type of story referred to as ]. ]'s novel '']'' was, according to the author, born out of frustration with the small amount of actual combat in ''Starship Troopers'' and because he wanted this aspect developed further.<ref>{{cite web
| author=Dave Alpern
| title = Steakley Interviews – First Chat
| publisher=The Official Unofficial John Steakley Site
| year = 1997
| month = November
| url = http://johnsteakley.com/inter.html
| accessdate =February 22, 2011 |archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20080606225719/http://johnsteakley.com/inter.html |archivedate=June 6, 2008}}
</ref> Conversely, ]'s anti-war novel '']'' is popularly thought to be a direct reply to ''Starship Troopers'', and though Haldeman has stated that it is actually a result of his personal experiences in the ], he has admitted to being influenced by ''Starship Troopers''.<ref name=Haldeman/> '']'' by ] is also thought by many to have been either a direct response to or influenced by ''Starship Troopers''. Card has flatly denied this, saying that he never read the novel and did not read ''The Forever War'' until after writing ''Ender's Game''.<ref>{{cite web
| url = http://www.hatrack.com/research/questions/q0029.shtml
| title = Student Research Area: Orson Scott Card Answers Questions
| accessdate =March 4, 2006
| year = 2000 }}
</ref> ] wrote a satirical book called '']'' which he described as "a piss-take on Heinlein's ''Starship Troopers''."<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.octocon.com/1997/hharriso.htm|archiveurl =http://web.archive.org/web/20050830195533/http://www.octocon.com/1997/hharriso.htm|archivedate = August 30, 2005|title= Harry Harrison|accessdate =March 27, 2010}}
</ref> ]'s novel '']'' is, according to the author, explicitly patterned after ''Starship Troopers''.<ref>{{cite web
| url = http://dshoffman.blogspot.com/2005/05/old-mans-war-distaff-view.html
| title = Old Man's War: The Distaff View
| first = Douglas
| last = Hoffman
| year = 2005
| accessdate =March 4, 2006 }}
</ref> In recent years, ]'s series '']'' (also known as the '']'' series) featured a more explicit homage to Heinlein's book. In 1987, a '']''-style ] set in the ''Starship Troopers'' universe, ''Combat Command in the World of Robert A. Heinlein's ''Starship Troopers'': Shines the Name'' by Mark Acres, was published by ].


Some of Heinlein's other works have also been described as racist, though Franklin argues that this was not unique to Heinlein, and that he was less racist than the US government of the time.{{sfn|Franklin|1980|p=51}} Heinlein's early novel '']'' was called a "racist paean" to a white resistance movement against an Asian horde derived from the ].{{sfn|Suvin|2008|p=125}} In 1978, Moorcock wrote that ''Starship Troopers'' "set the pattern for Heinlein's more ambitious paternalistic, xenophobic" stories.<ref name=Moorcock/> Robert Lowndes argues that the war between the Terrans and the Arachnids is not about a quest for racial purity, but rather an extension of Heinlein's belief that man is a wild animal. According to this theory, if man lacks a ] beyond the will to survive, and he was confronted by another species with a similar lack of morality, then the only possible moral result would be warfare.<ref name=Lowndes/>
===Film and television===
The 1986 ] film '']'' incorporated themes and phrases from the novel, such as the terms "the drop" and "bug hunt", as well as the cargo-loader exoskeleton. The actors playing the Colonial Marines were also required to read ''Starship Troopers'' as part of their preparation prior to filming.<ref>{{cite video
| people = ] (Lead actress)
| date = December 2, 2003
| title = ] (Superior Firepower: The Making of Aliens)
| medium = DVD
| publisher=]
| location = California, United States
| id = UPC 024543098478 }}
</ref>


The fact that all pilots in the novel are women (in contrast to the infantry, which is entirely male) has been cited as evidence of progressive gender politics within the story, although the idea expressed by Rico that women are the motivation for men to fight in the military is a counter-example to this.<ref name="JW"/>{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=221}} A 1996 science fiction encyclopedia said that like much of Heinlein's fiction, ''Starship Troopers'' exemplified "macho male culture".<ref>{{cite book|last1=Tymn|first1=Marshall B.|title=The Science Fiction Reference Book|date=1981|publisher=Starmont House|location=], Washington, US|isbn=0-916732-49-5|page=|url=https://archive.org/details/sciencefictionre0000unse/page/332}}</ref> The prosthetically enhanced soldiers in the novel, all of whom are men, have been described as an example of the "hyper-masculinity" brought on by the proximity of these men to technology.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|editor-last1=James|editor-first1=Edward|editor-first2=Farah|editor-last2=Mendlesohn|encyclopedia=The Cambridge Companion to Science Fiction|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2003|title=Gender in science fiction|first=Helen|last=Merrick|page=246|location=Cambridge, UK|isbn=978-0-521-01657-5}}</ref> The story portrays the Arachnids as so alien that the only response to them can be war. Feminist scholars have described this reaction as a "conventionally masculinist" one.{{sfn|Hollinger|2003|p=132}} Steffen Hantke has described the mechanized suits in the novel, which make the wearer resemble a "steel gorilla," as defining masculinity as "something intensely physical, based on animal power, instinct, and aggression". He calls this form of masculinity "all body, so to speak, and no brain".{{sfn|Hantke|1998|p=498}} Thus, in Hantke's reading, ''Starship Troopers'' expresses fears of how masculinity may be preserved in an environment of high technology.{{sfn|Hantke|1998|p=502}} This fear is exacerbated by the motifs of pregnancy and birth that Heinlein uses when describing how the soldiers in suits are dropped from spaceships piloted by women.{{sfn|Hantke|1998|pp=499–501}} Though Rico says he finds women "marvelous", he shows no desire for sexual activity; the war seems to have subsumed sex in this respect.<ref name="Magill"/> A 1979 summary argued that despite the gestures towards women's equality, women in the story were still objects, to be protected, and to fight wars over.<ref name="Magill"/>
The film rights to the novel were licensed in the 1990s.<ref>{{cite journal
| last = Robley
| first = Les Paul
| year = 1997
| month = November
| title = Interstellar Exterminators. Ornery insects threaten the galaxy in Starship Troopers
| journal=]
| volume = 78
| issue = 11
| pages = 56–66
| publisher=]
| location = California, United States of America}}
</ref> The first film, also titled '']'', was directed by ] ('']'', '']'') and released in 1997. The film diverged greatly in terms of the themes and plot of the novel, and received mixed reviews from critics.<ref>{{cite web
| title = Starship Troopers – Rotten Tomatoes
| url = http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/starship_troopers/
| accessdate =February 1, 2008 }}
</ref> A sequel followed in 2004, titled '']'', and another in 2008, '']''. An animated series, '']'', which took inspiration from both the novel and the first film, was started in 1999 and lasted for 40 episodes.


==Influence==
Yoshiyuki Tomino, the creator of the ] anime TV series '']'' (1979) has cited ''Starship Troopers'' as inspiration.<ref>{{cite book|last=Tomino|first=Yoshiyuki|title=Mobile Suit Gundam: Awakening, Escalation, Confrontation|publisher=Stone Bridge Press|year=2004|page=8|isbn=978-1-880656-86-0|url=http://books.google.com/?id=E5U95deDqxkC&dq=Yoshiyuki+Tomino+starship+troopers+gundam}}</ref>
]


Heinlein's books, and ''Starship Troopers'' in particular, had an enormous impact on political science fiction, to the extent that author Ken MacLeod has stated that "the political strand in can be described as a dialogue with Heinlein," although many participants in this dialogue disagree with Heinlein.{{sfn|Macleod|2003|p=231}} Science fiction critic ] states that ''Starship Troopers'' is the "ancestral text of US ]" and that it shaped the debate about the role of the military in society for many years.{{sfn|Suvin|2008|p=123}}
In 1988, ] and ] produced a 6-episode Japanese ] locally titled '']''.


In addition to his political views, Heinlein's ideas about a futuristic military as depicted in the novel were deeply influential among films, books, and television shows in later years.{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=221}} Roger Beaumont has suggested that ''Starship Troopers'' may some day be considered a manual for extraterrestrial warfare.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Beaumont|first1=Roger|title=Military Fiction and Role: Some Problems and Perspectives|journal=Military Affairs|date=April 1975|volume=39|issue=2|pages=69–71|doi=10.2307/1986930|jstor=1986930}}</ref> Suvin refers to Juan Rico as the "archetypal Space Soldier".<ref name="Suvin">{{cite journal|last1=Suvin|first1=Darko|title=Of Starship Troopers and Refuseniks: War and Militarism in U.S. Science Fiction, Part 2|journal=Extrapolation|date=2006|volume=48|issue=1}}</ref> ''Starship Troopers'' included concepts in military engineering which have since been widely used in other fiction, and which have occasionally been paralleled by scientific research. The novel has been cited as the source of the idea of ] ]s, which Heinlein describes in great detail.<ref name="Intersections">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Zao2IFNhvQkC|title=Intersections: Fantasy and Science Fiction Alternatives|date=1987|publisher=Southern Illinois University Press|isbn=9780809313747|location=Carbondale, Illinois|pages=210–220|last1=Slusser|first1=George E.|access-date=July 1, 2017|archive-date=March 13, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230313134034/https://books.google.com/books?id=Zao2IFNhvQkC|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Mikołajewska|first1=Emilia|last2=Mikołajewski|first2=Dariusz|date=May 2013|title=Exoskeletons in Neurological Diseases – Current and Potential Future Applications|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/229012056|journal=Advances in Clinical and Experimental Medicine|volume=20|issue=2|pages=228 Fig. 2|access-date=July 1, 2017|archive-date=April 3, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200403142703/https://www.researchgate.net/publication/229012056_Exoskeletons_in_Neurological_Diseases-Current_and_Potential_Future_Applications|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20010630/bob8.asp| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060116201552/http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20010630/bob8.asp| archive-date=January 16, 2006| title=Dances with Robots| publisher=Science News Online| access-date=March 4, 2006| first=Peter| last=Weiss}}</ref><ref name=Camp/> Such suits became a staple of military science fiction. Franchises that have employed this technology include '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', and '']''.<ref name="Liptak"/> During the shooting of the science fiction film '']'', director ] required the actors playing ]s to read ''Starship Troopers'' to understand their parts, and also cited it as an influence for the space drop, terms like "bug hunt", and the cargo-loader exoskeleton.<ref>{{cite book|title=Aliens: The Illustrated Screenplay|chapter=Mothers With Guns|author=Cameron, James|editor=Sammon, Paul M.|pages=10–20|publisher=Orion|year=2001|isbn=0752831933}}</ref>
===Games===
In 1976, ] published '']'', a map-and-counter ] featuring a number of scenarios as written in the novel.<ref>{{cite web
| title = Robert Heinlein's Starship Troopers (1976)
| publisher=]
| date = n.d.
| url = http://www.boardgamegeek.com/game/670
| accessdate =February 1, 2008 }}</ref> In 1997, as a tie-in with Verhoeven's film adaptation, they published ''Starship Troopers: Prepare For Battle!'' which entirely focused on the film.<ref>{{cite web
| title = Starship Troopers
| publisher=]
| date = n.d.
| url = http://www.skirmisher.com/reviews_bg_sst-01.shtml
| accessdate =February 1, 2008 }}
</ref> ], a ] which used material from both the novel and the film was published by ] in 2005.<ref>{{cite web
| title = Starship Troopers Miniatures Game (2005)
| publisher=]
| date = n.d.
| url = http://www.boardgamegeek.com/game/15435
| accessdate =February 1, 2008 }}
</ref> In 1982, Radio Shack/Tandy published ''Klendathu'' by Leo Christopherson for the TRS-80 Model I/II/III and Color Computer.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://nitros9.lcurtisboyle.com/klendathu.html |title=Klendathu |publisher=Nitros9.lcurtisboyle.com |accessdate=March 27, 2010}}</ref> In 1998, ]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mythicentertainment.com/history/ |title=Mythic Entertainment |accessdate=May 2, 2006}}</ref> released ''Starship Troopers: Battlespace'' which was available to ] subscribers. The game, in which players battled each other in overhead space combat, allowed players to assume either Klendathu or Federation roles. In 2000, ] released the top-down ] video game '']''.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.mobygames.com/game/windows/starship-troopers-terran-ascendancy| title=Starship Troopers: Terran Ascendancy| accessdate=March 4, 2006}}</ref> A ] game titled '']'' was released November 15, 2005, based on Paul Verhoeven's film version rather than on Heinlein's novel. It was developed by ] and published by ]. ''Starship Troopers'' is also thought to have influenced numerous computer games including '']'', '']'',<ref>A training mission in '']'' uses the phrase "on the bounce" from the novel.</ref> '']'',<ref>Heinlein was thanked in the credits of '']''</ref> and '']''. They are also the basis of the ODST in the Halo series


''Starship Troopers'' had a direct influence on many later science fiction stories. ]'s 1984 novel '']'' was, according to the author, born out of frustration with the small amount of actual combat in ''Starship Troopers'' and because he wanted this aspect developed further.<ref>{{cite web|first = Dave| last = Alpern| title = Steakley Interviews – First Chat| publisher=The Official Unofficial John Steakley Site|date=November 1997| url = http://johnsteakley.com/inter.html| access-date=February 22, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080606225719/http://johnsteakley.com/inter.html |archive-date=June 6, 2008}}</ref> The "Mobile Suits" from the 1979 ] ] series '']'' were inspired by the powered armor from ''Starship Troopers''.<ref>{{cite book |last=Tomino |first=Yoshiyuki |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E5U95deDqxkC&q=Yoshiyuki+Tomino+starship+troopers+gundam |title=Mobile Suit Gundam: Awakening, Escalation, Confrontation |publisher=Stone Bridge Press |year=2004 |isbn=978-1-880656-86-0 |page=8 |access-date=September 24, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170215082247/https://books.google.com/books?id=E5U95deDqxkC&dq=Yoshiyuki+Tomino+starship+troopers+gundam |archive-date=February 15, 2017 |url-status=live}}</ref> The 1988 ] ] series '']'' has plot elements similar to ''Starship Troopers'', depicting humanity arrayed against an alien military.<ref name=Camp>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=X6YtQxURSvUC|title=Anime Classics Zettai!: 100 Must-See Japanese Animation Masterpieces|last1=Camp|first1=Bryan|last2=Davis|first2=Julie|publisher=Stone Bridge Press|year=2007|location=]|isbn=9781933330228}}</ref> Scholars have identified elements of Heinlein's influence in '']'', by ], as well. Hantke, in particular, compares the battle room in ''Ender's Game'' to Heinlein's prosthetic suits, stating that they both regulate but also enhance human agency.{{sfn|Hantke|1998|p=504}} Suvin suggests parallels between the plots of the two novels, with human society in both stories at war against insect-like aliens, but states that the story of ] takes a very different direction, as Ender regrets his genocidal actions and dedicates his efforts to protecting his erstwhile targets.<ref name=Suvin/>
===Comics===
<!-- ] links here -->
], ] and ] have held the license to produce ]s based on ''Starship Troopers''. Over the years they have been written by writers like ], ] and ].<ref>{{cite web |first= Craig |last=Johnson |url=http://www.comicsbulletin.com/features/109837989728062.htm |title=Tony Lee: I Lost My Heart To A Starship Trooper |publisher=] |date=October 21, 2004 |accessdate=September 30, 2009 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |first=Steven |last=Saunders |url=http://www.comicsbulletin.com/features/116821080895539.htm |title=Tony Lee: Comic Book Trooper |publisher=] |date=January 7, 2007 |accessdate=September 30, 2009}}</ref>


Conversely, ]'s 1974 anti-war, ]- and ]-winning science fiction novel '']'' is popularly thought to be a direct reply to ''Starship Troopers'', and though Haldeman has stated that it is actually a result of his personal experiences in the ], he has admitted to being influenced by ''Starship Troopers''.<ref name=Haldeman/><ref name="WWE-1976">{{cite web|url=http://www.worldswithoutend.com/books_year_index.asp?year=1976|title=1976 Award Winners & Nominees|work=Worlds Without End|access-date=July 27, 2009|archive-date=August 4, 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090804022800/http://www.worldswithoutend.com/books_year_index.asp?year=1976|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="WWE-1975">{{cite web|url=http://www.worldswithoutend.com/books_year_index.asp?year=1975|title=1975 Award Winners & Nominees|work=Worlds Without End|access-date=July 27, 2009|archive-date=April 18, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120418233801/https://www.worldswithoutend.com/books_year_index.asp?year=1975|url-status=live}}</ref> Haldeman said that he disagreed with ''Starship Troopers'' because it "glorifies war", but added that "it's a very well-crafted novel, and I believe Heinlein was honest with it".<ref name="Haldeman">{{cite web|last=Haldeman| first=Joe| url=http://www.scifi.com/transcripts/1998/JoeHaldeman.html| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060315063638/http://www.scifi.com/transcripts/1998/JoeHaldeman.html| archive-date=March 15, 2006| title= 1998 SciFi.com interview| year=1998| access-date=March 4, 2006}}</ref> ''The Forever War'' contains several parallels to ''Starship Troopers'', including its setting. Commentators have described it as a reaction to Heinlein's novel, a suggestion Haldeman denies; the two novels are very different in terms of their attitude towards the military. ''The Forever War'' does not depict war as a noble pursuit, with the sides clearly defined as good and evil; instead, the novel explores the dehumanizing effect of war, influenced by the real world context of the Vietnam War.<ref name=JH>{{cite book|last=Gordon|first=Joan|title=Joe Haldeman|publisher=Wildside Press LLC|page=33|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=T8xA-sA5z80C|isbn=9780916732066|location=], US|year=1980|access-date=February 16, 2016|archive-date=March 13, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230313134036/https://books.google.com/books?id=T8xA-sA5z80C|url-status=live}}</ref> Haldeman received a letter from Heinlein, congratulating him on his Nebula Award, which "meant more than the award itself".<ref>Requiem, Yoji Kondo, editor, p. 274</ref> According to author ], Heinlein approached Haldeman at the awards banquet and said the book "may be the best future war story I've ever read!"<ref>Requiem, Yoji Kondo, editor, p. 315</ref>
==Release details==
* 1960-06-01, Putnam Publishing Group, hardcover, ISBN 0-399-20209-9
* May, 1968, Berkley Medallion Edition, paperback, ISBN 0-425-02945-X and ISBN 0-425-03787-8
* January 1984, Berkley Publishing Group, paperback, ISBN 0-425-07158-8
* November 1985, Berkley Publishing Group, paperback, ISBN 0-425-09144-9
* November 1986, Berkley Publishing Group, paperback, ISBN 0-425-09926-1
* 1987-05-01, Ace Books, paperback, 263 pages, ISBN 0-441-78358-9
* 1995-10-01, Buccaneer Books, hardcover, ISBN 1-56849-287-1
* 1997-12-01, Blackstone Audiobooks, cassette audiobook, ISBN 0-7861-1231-X
* 1998-07-01, G. K. Hall & Company, large print hardcover, 362 pages, ISBN 0-7838-0118-1
* 1999-10-01, Sagebrush, library binding, ISBN 0-7857-8728-3
* 2000-01-01, Blackstone Audiobooks, CD audiobook, ISBN 0-7861-9946-6
* 2006-06-27, Ace Trade, paperback, ISBN 0-441-01410-0


]'s 1965 novel '']'' has also been described as a reaction to ''Starship Troopers'',{{sfn|Booker|Thomas|2009|p=214}} while ]'s 1961 novel '']'' has been called "an obvious rejoinder" to ''Starship Troopers''.{{sfn|Macleod|2003|p=213}} '']'', written by ] in 1993, also depicts a war between two highly aggressive species, of which humans are one. The story deliberately inverts several aspects of ''Starship Troopers'': the story is told from the point of view of diplomats seeking to prevent war, rather than soldiers fighting it, and the conflict is the result of the two species being extremely similar, rather than different.{{sfn|Hollinger|2003|pp=132–133}}
==References==
;Notes
{{Reflist|2}}


==Adaptations==
;Bibliography
===1997 film===
{{Refbegin}}
{{Main|Starship Troopers (film){{!}}''Starship Troopers'' (film)}}
* Angelo, Carlos. .
{{Further|Starship Troopers (franchise){{!}}''Starship Troopers'' (franchise)}}
* {{cite news

| first=Roberto de Sousa
The film rights to the novel were licensed in the 1990s, several years after Heinlein's death. The project was originally entitled ''Bug Hunt at Outpost Nine'', and had been in production before the producers bought the rights to ''Starship Troopers''.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Robley|first=Les Paul|date=November 1997|title=Interstellar Exterminators. Ornery insects threaten the galaxy in Starship Troopers|journal=]|volume=78|issue=11|pages=56–66|publisher=]|location=California, United States of America}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last1=Mitrovich|first1=Matt|title=A Defense of Starship Troopers the Novel (and Why the Film is not Misunderstood)|url=https://amazingstoriesmag.com/2013/11/defense-starship-troopers-novel-film-misunderstood/|website=Amazing Stories|date=November 12, 2013|access-date=May 9, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170805125830/https://amazingstoriesmag.com/2013/11/defense-starship-troopers-novel-film-misunderstood/|archive-date=August 5, 2017|url-status=dead|df=mdy-all}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last1=Brethan|first1=Tom|title=The Grisly, Goofy Starship Troopers Played Dumb To Make Hollywood Look Even Dumber|url=http://theconcourse.deadspin.com/the-grisly-goofy-starship-troopers-played-dumb-to-make-1741600229|website=Deadspin|date=November 20, 2015|access-date=May 9, 2017|archive-date=April 28, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210428091552/https://theconcourse.deadspin.com/the-grisly-goofy-starship-troopers-played-dumb-to-make-1741600229|url-status=live}}</ref> The film was directed by ] (who found the book too boring to finish), and released in 1997.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.empireonline.com/movies/features/paul-verhoeven/|title=Triple Dutch: Paul Verhoeven's sci-fi trilogy|last1=Smith|first1=Adam|last2=Williams|first2=Owen|date=August 2012|website=Empire|access-date=December 7, 2016|archive-date=August 29, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160829081340/http://www.empireonline.com/movies/features/paul-verhoeven/|url-status=live}}</ref> The screenplay, by ], shared character names and some plot details with the novel.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/starship_troopers/|title=Starship Troopers (1997)|website=Rotten Tomatoes|access-date=April 20, 2016|archive-date=March 2, 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220302124135/https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/starship_troopers|url-status=live}}</ref> The film contained several elements that differed from the book, including a military that is completely integrated with respect to sex. It had the stated intention of treating its material in an ironic or sarcastic manner, to undermine the political ideology of the novel.<ref name="Goss"/><ref name="gemsbok">{{Cite web|url=http://thegemsbok.com/art-reviews-and-articles/thursday-theater-starship-troopers-paul-verhoeven-robert-heinlein/|title=Poking Fun at Militarism: How Paul Verhoeven's Cult Classic ''Starship Troopers'' Willfully Discards Robert Heinlein's Novel|last=Podgorski|first=Daniel|date=February 4, 2016|website=The Gemsbok|access-date=December 7, 2016|archive-date=January 3, 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220103033103/https://thegemsbok.com/art-reviews-and-articles/thursday-theater-starship-troopers-paul-verhoeven-robert-heinlein/|url-status=live}}</ref> The mechanized suits that featured prominently in the novel were absent from the film, due to budget constraints.{{sfn|Hantke|1998|p=498}}
| last=Causo

| pages=XX
The film utilized fascist imagery throughout, including portraying the Terran Federation's personnel wearing uniforms strongly reminiscent of those worn by the ], the ] paramilitary.{{sfn|Cass|1999|p=55}} Verhoeven stated in 1997 that the first scene of the film{{snd}}an advertisement for the Mobile Infantry{{snd}}was adapted shot-for-shot from a scene in ]'s '']'' (1935), specifically an outdoor rally for the ]. Other references to Nazism include the ]-style architecture and the propagandistic dialogue ("''Violence is the supreme authority!"'').<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://ew.com/article/1997/11/21/starship-troopers-relys-nazi-imagery/|title="Starship Troopers" Relies on Nazi imagery|last=Svetkey|first=Benjamin|date=November 21, 1997|magazine=Entertainment Weekly|access-date=December 7, 2016|archive-date=October 25, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181025111959/https://ew.com/ew/article/0,,290338,00.html|url-status=live}}</ref> According to Verhoeven, the references to Nazism reflected his own experience in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands during World War II.<ref name="Strzelczyk"/><ref name="blogspot1">{{cite web|url=http://thehollywoodinterview.blogspot.com/2010/09/paul-verhoeven-starship-troopers.html|title=Paul Verhoeven: The "Starship Troopers" Hollywood Flashback Interview|last=Simon|first=Alex|website=The Hollywood Interview|date=January 11, 2013|access-date=April 20, 2016|archive-date=July 4, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170704200000/http://thehollywoodinterview.blogspot.com/2010/09/paul-verhoeven-starship-troopers.html|url-status=live}}</ref>
| title=Citizenship at War

| date=February 21, 1998
The film reignited the debate over the nature of the Terran society in Heinlein's world, and several critics accused Verhoeven of creating a fascist universe. Others, and Verhoeven himself, have stated that the film was intended to be ], and to critique fascism.{{sfn|Crim|2010|p=104}}{{sfn|Cass|1999|pp=54–57}} The film has also been described as criticizing the ] of US foreign policy, the ], and the society in the film, which elevates violence over sensitivity.<ref name="Marsh">{{cite news|last1=Marsh|first1=Calum|title=Starship Troopers: One of the Most Misunderstood Movies Ever|url=https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2013/11/-em-starship-troopers-em-one-of-the-most-misunderstood-movies-ever/281236/|access-date=May 9, 2017|work=The Atlantic|date=November 7, 2013|archive-date=May 27, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200527231933/https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2013/11/-em-starship-troopers-em-one-of-the-most-misunderstood-movies-ever/281236/|url-status=live}}</ref> It received several negative critical reviews, reviewers suggesting that it was unsophisticated and targeted a juvenile audience, although some scholars and critics have also supported its description as satirical.<ref name="Liptak"/><ref name=Strzelczyk/><ref name="gemsbok"/><ref name="Marsh"/> The absence of the powered armor technology drew criticism from fans.<ref name="Liptak"/>{{sfn|Hantke|1998|p=498}} The success of the film's endeavor to critique the ideology of the novel has been disputed.<ref name=Strzelczyk>{{cite journal|last1=Strzelczyk|first1=Florentine|title=Our Future – Our Past: Fascism, Postmodernism, and Starship Troopers (1997)|journal=Modernism/Modernity|date=January 2008|volume=15|issue=1|pages=87–99|doi=10.1353/mod.2008.0012|s2cid=146369100}}</ref>
| publisher=O Jornal da Tarde

| url=http://www.wegrokit.com/causost.htm}}
Four sequels, '']'' (2004),<ref>{{cite web|title=Starship Troopers 2: Hero of the Federation|url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/starship_troopers_2_hero_of_the_federation|website=Rotten Tomatoes|access-date=May 8, 2017|archive-date=March 2, 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220302094002/https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/starship_troopers_2_hero_of_the_federation|url-status=live}}</ref> '']'' (2008),<ref>{{cite web|title=Starship Troopers 3: Marauder|url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/starship_troopers_3/|website=Rotten Tomatoes|access-date=May 8, 2017|archive-date=May 9, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210509055653/https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/starship_troopers_3|url-status=live}}</ref> '']'' (2012)<ref>{{cite web|last1=Loo|first1=Egan|title=CG Starship Troopers Anime's Ships Previewed|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/interest/2011-12-20/cg-starship-troopers-anime-ships-previewed|website=Anime News Network|date=December 20, 2011|access-date=May 8, 2017|archive-date=March 2, 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220302094008/https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/interest/2011-12-20/cg-starship-troopers-anime-ships-previewed|url-status=live}}</ref> and '']'' (2017) were released as straight-to-DVD films. In December 2011, ], producer of films such as the ] and '']'', announced plans for a ] of the film that he claims will be more faithful to the source material.<ref>{{cite web|title=A New Invasion: 'Starship Troopers' Headed for a Remake |url=http://www.latinoreview.com/news/a-new-invasion-starship-troopers-headed-for-a-remake-15525 |website=Latino Review|date=December 2, 2011|last=Patta|first=Gig|access-date=December 3, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111204020629/http://www.latinoreview.com/news/a-new-invasion-starship-troopers-headed-for-a-remake-15525 |archive-date=December 4, 2011 }}</ref> In 2016 ] and ] were reported to be writing the film.<ref name=HW>{{cite magazine|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/starship-troopers-reboot-works-943882|title='Starship Troopers' Reboot in the Works (Exclusive)|magazine=The Hollywood Reporter|last=Kit|first=Borys|date=November 3, 2016|access-date=May 8, 2017|archive-date=June 10, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170610170727/http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/starship-troopers-reboot-works-943882|url-status=live}}</ref>
* {{Cite journal

| author=Gifford, James
===Animated series===
| title=The Nature of Federal Service in Starship Troopers
{{Main|Roughnecks: Starship Troopers Chronicles {{!}}''Roughnecks: Starship Troopers Chronicles'' }}
| date=Year Unknown

| url=http://www.nitrosyncretic.com/rah/ftp/fedrlsvc.pdf
An animated TV series was also released is based both on the novel and 1997 film called ]. It follows the exploits of the Mobile Infantry squad, "Razak's Roughnecks", during the ] between a newly united humanity and an ] race, known as the "]," also sometimes referred to as Arachnids. The show focuses mainly on the Roughnecks' missions, rather than addressing the larger war. Paul Verhoeven served as an executive producer.<ref name=Perlmutter>{{cite book |last1=Perlmutter |first1=David |title=The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows |date=2018 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-1538103739 |pages=518–519}}</ref> The show ran for one season from August 1999 to April 2000.
|format=PDF}}

* {{cite book
===Other media===
| last = Heinlein | first = Robert A.
<!--] links here.-->
| authorlink = Robert A. Heinlein
From October to December 1988, Sunrise and ] produced a six-episode Japanese ] locally titled '']'' with mobile infantry power armor designs by ], based on ''Starship Troopers''.<ref>{{cite book |last=Clements |first=Jonathan |title=The Anime Encyclopedia, 3rd Revised Edition: A Century of Japanese Animation |publisher = Stone Bridge Press |year=2015 |isbn= 978-1611720181}}</ref> ], ] and ] hold the license to produce comic books based on ''Starship Troopers'', written by authors including ], ] and ].<ref>{{cite web|first=Craig |last=Johnson |url=http://www.comicsbulletin.com/features/109837989728062.htm |title=Tony Lee: I Lost My Heart To A Starship Trooper |publisher=] |date=October 21, 2004 |access-date=September 30, 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140315012841/http://www.comicsbulletin.com/features/109837989728062.htm |archive-date=March 15, 2014 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|first=Steven |last=Saunders |url=http://www.comicsbulletin.com/features/116821080895539.htm |title=Tony Lee: Comic Book Trooper |publisher=] |date=January 7, 2007 |access-date=September 30, 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140315013912/http://www.comicsbulletin.com/features/116821080895539.htm |archive-date=March 15, 2014 }}</ref> ] published '']'' in 1976, a map-and-counter ] featuring a number of scenarios as written in the novel.<ref>{{cite web| title = Robert Heinlein's Starship Troopers (1976)| publisher = ]| url = http://www.boardgamegeek.com/game/670| access-date = February 1, 2008| archive-date = February 5, 2008| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080205064841/http://www.boardgamegeek.com/game/670| url-status = live}}</ref> In 1998, ] released ''Starship Troopers: Battlespace''. The web-based interactive game, in which players battled each other in overhead space combat, allowed players to assume either Klendathu or Federation roles, was developed alongside the film adaptation.<ref name=Strzelczyk/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mythicentertainment.com/history/ |title=Mythic Entertainment|publisher=Mythicentertainment.com |access-date=May 2, 2006|archive-date=June 15, 2006|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060615011001/http://www.mythicentertainment.com/history/}}</ref> '']'' was released by Mongoose Publishing in 2005, a ] which used material from the novel, film, and animated TV series.<ref>{{cite web| title = Starship Troopers Miniatures Game (2005)| publisher = ]| url = http://www.boardgamegeek.com/game/15435| access-date = February 1, 2008| archive-date = January 21, 2008| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080121165842/http://www.boardgamegeek.com/game/15435| url-status = live}}</ref> ] released ''Starship Troopers: Invasion Mobile Infantry'', a game for PCs, in 2012.<ref name=Forbes>{{cite web|last1=Gaudiosi|first1=John|title=Actor Casper Van Dien Discusses Starship Troopers Going Virtual With New Movie And Game|url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/johngaudiosi/2012/08/30/actor-casper-van-dien-discusses-starship-troopers-going-virtual-with-new-movie-and-game/#2f586ce37c7b|website=Forbes|date=August 30, 2012|access-date=May 8, 2017|archive-date=June 12, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180612144751/https://www.forbes.com/sites/johngaudiosi/2012/08/30/actor-casper-van-dien-discusses-starship-troopers-going-virtual-with-new-movie-and-game/#2f586ce37c7b|url-status=live}}</ref> Offworld Industries developed and published the 2023 game '']'', a cooperative multiplayer ] available for PC.
| title=]

| publisher=Baen
==References==
| year=2003
{{reflist}}
| isbn=0-7434-7159-8

| oclc = 223822885
==Sources==
}} Contains Heinlein's comments on the writing and the politics of ''Starship Troopers'', as well as the polemical speech "The Pragmatics of Patriotism" on the moral basis of the military.
{{refbegin|24em}}
* ]. '''', Cienfuegos Press Anarchist Review, 1978.
* {{cite book|last1=Booker|first1=M. Keith|title=The Science Fiction Handbook|isbn=9781405162067|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uW9xST9UsOIC|first2=Anne-Marie|last2=Thomas|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|year=2009|location=Singapore|access-date=February 16, 2016|archive-date=March 13, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230313134041/https://books.google.com/books?id=uW9xST9UsOIC|url-status=live}}
* {{cite book
* {{cite journal|last=Cass|first=Jeffrey|title=SS Troopers: Cybernostalgia and Paul Verhoeven's Fascist Flirtation|journal=Studies in Popular Culture|volume=21|issue=3|date=April 1999|pages=51–63|jstor=23414533}}
| last = Panshin | first = Alexei
* {{cite journal|last=Crim|first=Brian E.|title=The Intergalactic Final Solution: Nazism and Genocide in Paul Verhoeven's Starship Troopers|journal=Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies|volume=28|issue=4 |date=Summer 2010|pages=104–115|doi=10.1353/sho.2010.0038|s2cid=170963056}}
| authorlink = Alexei Panshin
* {{cite book|last1=Franklin|first1=Howard Bruce|title=Robert A. Heinlein: America as science fiction|date=1980|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=0195027469|url=https://archive.org/details/robertaheinleina00fran|url-access=registration|location=New York City, New York, US}}
| url = http://www.enter.net/~torve/critics/Dimension/hdcontents.html
* {{cite journal|last=Hantke|first=Steffen|title=Surgical Strikes and Prosthetic Warriors: The Soldier's Body in Contemporary Science Fiction|journal=Science Fiction Studies|volume=25|issue=3|date=November 1998|pages=495–509|jstor=4240727}}
| title = Heinlein in Dimension
* {{cite book| last = Heinlein | first = Robert A. | author-link = Robert A. Heinlein| title=Expanded Universe | publisher=Baen | year=2003 | isbn=0-7434-7159-8 | oclc = 223822885|location=New York City, New York, US| title-link = Expanded Universe (book) }}
|publisher=Advent Publishers
* {{cite book|last=Heinlein|first=Robert A.|title=Starship Troopers|year=1987|publisher=Ace Books|location=New York City, New York|isbn=9781101500422|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1lK3xA72adAC|access-date=September 15, 2017|archive-date=March 13, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230313134043/https://books.google.com/books?id=1lK3xA72adAC|url-status=live}}
|year=1968
* {{cite book|last=Heinlein|first=Robert A.|title=Starship Troopers|year=2014|asin=B003ODIWEG}}
|isbn=0-911682-12-0
* {{cite encyclopedia|editor-last1=James|editor-first1=Edward|editor-first2=Farah|editor-last2=Mendlesohn|encyclopedia=The Cambridge Companion to Science Fiction|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2003|title=Feminist theory and science fiction|first=Veronica|last=Hollinger|pages=125–136|location=New York City, US}}
| oclc = 7535112}}
* {{cite journal|last=King|first=Jamie|title=Bug Planet: Frontier myth in Starship Troopers|journal=Futures|volume=30|issue=10|year=1998|pages=1017–1026|doi=10.1016/s0016-3287(98)00103-7}}
* {{Cite journal
* {{cite encyclopedia|editor-last1=James|editor-first1=Edward|editor-first2=Farah|editor-last2=Mendlesohn|encyclopedia=The Cambridge Companion to Science Fiction|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2003|title=Politics and science fiction|first=Ken|last=Macleod|pages=230–240|location=], UK}}
| author=Panshin, Alexei
* {{cite book|last=Panshin|first=Alexei|author-link=Alexei Panshin|url=https://archive.org/details/heinleinindimens0000pans|title=Heinlein in Dimension|publisher=Advent Publishers|year=1968|isbn=0-911682-12-0|oclc=7535112|location=Chicago, Illinois, US|url-access=registration}}
| title=''Rite of Passage'' and Robert Heinlein
* {{cite book|last1=Slusser|first1=George E.|title=Hard science fiction|date=1986|publisher=Southern Illinois University Press|location=]|isbn=9780809312344|page=|url=https://archive.org/details/hardscienceficti00slus|url-access=registration}}
| date=Year Unknown
* {{cite encyclopedia|last1=Suvin|first1=Darko|editor1-last=Hassler|editor1-first=Donald M.|editor2-last=Wilcox|editor2-first=Clyde|encyclopedia=New Boundaries in Political Science Fiction|title=Of Starship Troopers and Refuseniks: War and Militarism in U.S. Science Fiction, Part 1|pages=115–144|date=2008|publisher=University of South Carolina Press|isbn=9781570037368|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-8iD6iuO-iAC|location=], US|access-date=February 1, 2021|archive-date=March 13, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230313134046/https://books.google.com/books?id=-8iD6iuO-iAC|url-status=live}}
| url=http://www.enter.net/~torve/critics/HeinleinRoP/ropcontents.html
}} Describes a correspondence with Heinlein over "Starship Troopers" in 1959.
* {{cite journal
| first = James | last = Pinkerton
| authorlink=James Pinkerton
| title=Starship Trooperization
| journal=Tech Central Station Daily
| month=May | year=2003 | pages=
| url=http://www.techcentralstation.com/051203B.html}}
* {{cite web | title=The Heinlein Society | work=Official Robert Anson Heinlein Estate Endorsed Website | url=http://www.heinleinsociety.org | accessdate=December 1, 2005}}
* : A two year debate about the novel in a Science Fiction publication occurring immediately after its publication.
* Weuve, Christopher. ''''. Examines some of the issues surrounding Heinlein's version and Verhoeven's version.
{{Refend}} {{Refend}}


==External links== ==External links==
{{Wikiquote}} {{Wikiquote}}
* {{isfdb title|id=1112|title=Starship Troopers}} * {{ISFDB title|1112}}
* ''Starship Soldier'' and on the ]
* '''' by Roberto de Sousa Causo. Review from a Brazilian newspaper.
* by Branislav L. Slantchev.
* by T. M. Wagner.
* by ]
* by Richard Geib.
* by Christopher Weuve.
* – essay by Spider Robinson in defense of Heinlein mostly against Panshin's "Heinlein In Dimension"
* at Worlds Without End
* '''' by Rafeeq O. McGiveron. Examines Heinlein's transnational governments, including the Terran Federation.
* '''' by Robert Peterson. Argues Heinlein's Federation is a fascist government.


{{Robert A. Heinlein}}
==Related information==<!-- see ] -->
{{Heinlein (Novel)}}
{{Starship Troopers}} {{Starship Troopers}}
{{Hugo Award Best Novel 1946-1960}} {{Hugo Award Best Novel}}
{{Authority control}}


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Latest revision as of 04:07, 9 January 2025

1959 science fiction novel by Robert A. Heinlein This article is about the novel. For the 1997 film, see Starship Troopers (film). For other uses, see Starship Troopers (disambiguation).

Starship Troopers
First edition hardcover
AuthorRobert A. Heinlein
Cover artistJerry Robinson
LanguageEnglish
GenreMilitary science fiction
Philosophical fiction
PublisherG. P. Putnam's Sons
Publication dateNovember 5, 1959
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardcover and paperback)
Pages263 (paperback edition)
ISBN978-0450044496
OCLC2797649
LC ClassPZ7.H368 Su

Starship Troopers is a military science fiction novel by American writer Robert A. Heinlein. Written in a few weeks in reaction to the US suspending nuclear tests, the story was first published as a two-part serial in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction as Starship Soldier, and published as a book by G. P. Putnam's Sons on November 5, 1959.

The story is set in a future society ruled by a human interstellar government called the Terran Federation, dominated by a military elite. Under the Terran Federation, only veterans of Federal Service (including, but not limited to, military service) enjoy full citizenship, such as the right to vote. The first-person narrative follows Juan "Johnny" Rico, a young man of Filipino descent, through his military service in the Mobile Infantry. He progresses from recruit to officer against the backdrop of an interstellar war between humans and an alien species known as "Arachnids" or "Bugs". Interspersed with the primary plot are classroom scenes in which Rico and others discuss philosophical and moral issues, including aspects of suffrage, civic virtue, juvenile delinquency, and war; these discussions have been described as expounding Heinlein's own political views. Starship Troopers has been identified with a tradition of militarism in US science fiction, and draws parallels between the conflict between humans and the Bugs, and the Cold War. A coming-of-age novel, Starship Troopers also criticizes the US society of the 1950s, arguing that a lack of discipline had led to a moral decline, and advocates corporal and capital punishment.

Starship Troopers brought to an end Heinlein's series of juvenile novels. It won the Hugo Award for Best Novel in 1960, and was praised by reviewers for its scenes of training and combat and its visualization of a future military. It also became enormously controversial because of the political views it seemed to support. Reviewers were strongly critical of the book's intentional glorification of the military, an aspect described as propaganda and likened to recruitment. The novel's militarism, and the fact that government service – most often military service – was a prerequisite to the right to vote in the novel's fictional society, led to it being frequently described as fascist. Others disagree, arguing that Heinlein was only exploring the idea of limiting the right to vote to a certain group of people. Heinlein's depiction of gender has also been questioned, while reviewers have said that the terms used to describe the aliens were akin to racial epithets.

Despite the controversy, Starship Troopers had wide influence both within and outside science fiction. Ken MacLeod stated that "the political strand in can be described as a dialogue with Heinlein". Science fiction critic Darko Suvin wrote that Starship Troopers is the "ancestral text of US science fiction militarism" and that it shaped the debate about the role of the military in society for many years. The novel has been credited with popularizing the idea of powered armor, which has since become a recurring feature in science fiction books and films, as well as an object of scientific research. Heinlein's depiction of a futuristic military was also influential. Later science fiction books, such as Joe Haldeman's 1974 anti-war novel The Forever War, have been described as reactions to Starship Troopers. The story has been adapted several times, including in a 1997 film version directed by Paul Verhoeven with screenplay by Edward Neumeier that sought to satirize what the director saw as the fascist aspects of the novel.

Writing and publication

The cover of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (November 1959), illustrating Starship Soldier

Robert Heinlein was among the best-selling science fiction authors of the 1940s and 1950s, along with Isaac Asimov and Arthur C. Clarke; they were known as the "big three" that dominated US science fiction. In contrast to the others, Heinlein firmly endorsed the anti-communist sentiment of the Cold War era in his writing. Heinlein served in the US Navy for five years after graduating from the United States Naval Academy in 1929. His experience in the military profoundly influenced his fiction. At some point between 1958 and 1959, Heinlein put aside the novel that would become Stranger in a Strange Land and wrote Starship Troopers. His motivation arose partially from his anger at US President Dwight Eisenhower's decision to suspend US nuclear tests, and the Soviet tests that occurred soon afterward. Writing in his 1980 volume Expanded Universe, Heinlein would say that the publication of a newspaper advertisement placed by the National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy on April 5, 1958, calling for a unilateral suspension of nuclear weapons testing by the United States sparked his desire to write Starship Troopers. Heinlein and his wife Virginia created the "Patrick Henry League" in an attempt to create support for the US nuclear testing program. Heinlein stated that he used the novel to clarify his military and political views.

Like many of Heinlein's books, Starship Troopers was completed in a few weeks. It was originally written as a juvenile novel for New York publishing house Scribner; Heinlein had previously had success with this format, having written several such novels published by Scribner. The manuscript was rejected, prompting Heinlein to end his association with the publisher completely, and resume writing books with adult themes. Scholars have suggested that Scribner's rejection was based on ideological objections to the content of the novel, particularly its treatment of military conflict.

The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction first published Starship Troopers in October and November 1959 as a two-part serial titled Starship Soldier. A senior editor at Putnam's, Peter Israel, purchased the manuscript and approved revisions that made it more marketable to adults. Asked whether it was aimed at children or adults, he said at a sales conference "Let's let the readers decide who likes it." The novel was eventually published by G. P. Putnam's Sons.

Setting

Set approximately 700 years in the future, the book depicts an Earth ruled by a world government run by military veterans. The society is depicted as affluent, and futuristic technology shown as coexisting with educational methods from the 20th century. The rights of a full citizen, to vote and hold public office, are not universally guaranteed, and rather must be earned through Federal Service. Those who do not perform this service (of which only military service has been described) retain the rights of free speech and assembly, but can neither vote nor hold public office. Those of either sex, above the age of 18, are permitted to enlist; only those who complete their service receive the right to vote. Important government jobs are reserved for federal service veterans. This structure arose ad hoc after the collapse of the "20th century Western democracies", driven in part by an inability to control crime and juvenile delinquency, particularly in North America, and a war between an alliance of the United States, the United Kingdom and Russia, against the "Chinese Hegemony".

Two extraterrestrial civilizations are depicted, respectively, as the "Pseudo-Arachnids" (or "Bugs"), and the "Skinnies". The "Bugs" are described as communal beings originating from the planet of Klendathu, and consist of multiple castes; workers, warriors, brains, and queens, similar to those of ants and termites on Earth. The warriors are the only ones who fight, and are unable to surrender in battle. It also is implied that the Bugs are technologically advanced, possessing such technologies as spaceships. The "Skinnies" are depicted as less communal than the Arachnids, yet more so than humans. The events of the novel take place during an interstellar war between the Terran Federation and the Arachnids. At the opening of the story, Earth is not at war, yet such a declaration has come when Rico has completed his training. The "Skinnies" are initially allies of the Pseudo-Arachnids, but switch to alliance with humans, midway through the novel. Faster-than-light travel exists in this future: spacecraft use the "Cherenkov drive", and can travel "Sol to Capella, forty-six lightyears, in under six weeks".

Starship Troopers is narrated by the main protagonist Juan "Johnny" Rico, a member of the "Mobile Infantry". It is one of the few Heinlein novels which intersperses his typical linear narrative structure with a series of flashbacks. These flashbacks are frequently to Rico's "History and Moral Philosophy" course in school, in which the teacher discusses the history of the structure of their society. Rico is depicted as a man of Filipino ancestry. He is from a wealthy family, whose members had never served in the military. Rico's ancestry is depicted as inconsequential, society having finally abandoned racial and gender-based prejudice.

Plot

The novel opens with Rico aboard the corvette transport Rodger Young (named after real life Medal of Honor recipient Rodger Wilton Young), serving with the platoon known as "Rasczak's Roughnecks". The platoon carries out a raid against a planetary colony held by Skinnies. The raid is relatively brief: the platoon lands on the planet, destroys its targets, and retreats, suffering two casualties in the process. One of them, Dizzy Flores, is rescued by Rico but dies while returning to orbit. The narrative then flashes back to Rico's graduation from high school. Rico and his best friend Carl are considering joining the Federal Service after graduation; Rico is hesitant, partly due to his father's attitude towards the military. Rico makes his decision after discovering that his classmate Carmen Ibañez also intends to enlist.

Rico's choice is taken poorly by his parents, and he leaves with a sense of estrangement. He is assigned to the Mobile Infantry, and moves to Camp Arthur Currie (named for Arthur Currie who rose through the ranks to general in World War I) on the Canadian prairie for his training under Sergeant Charles Zim. The training is extremely demanding. Rico receives combat training of all types, including simulated fights in armored suits. A fellow recruit is court-martialed, flogged, and dismissed for striking a drill instructor who was also his company commander. Rico himself is given five lashes for firing a rocket during a drill with armored suits and simulated nuclear weapons without ensuring that no friendlies were within the blast zone, which in combat would have resulted in the death of a fellow soldier. Another recruit, who murdered a baby girl after deserting the army, is hanged by his battalion after his arrest by civilian police. Disheartened, Rico thinks of resigning when he receives a letter from Jean Dubois, who taught Rico History and Moral Philosophy. Dubois reveals that he was once a lieutenant colonel in the Mobile Infantry, which gives Rico the motivation not to resign. After further training at another camp near Vancouver, Rico graduates with 187 others, of the 2,009 who had begun training in that regiment.

The "Bug War" has changed from minor incidents to a full-scale war during Rico's training. An Arachnid attack that annihilates the city of Buenos Aires alerts civilians to the situation; Rico's mother is killed in the attack. Rico participates in the Battle of Klendathu, an attack on the Arachnid's home world, which turns into a disastrous defeat for the Terran Federation. Rico's ship, the Valley Forge, is destroyed, and his unit is decimated; he is reassigned to the Roughnecks on board the Rodger Young, led by Lieutenant Rasczak and Sergeant Jelal. The unit carries out several raids, and Rico is promoted to corporal by Jelal after Rasczak dies in combat.

One of his comrades in the Roughnecks suggests that Rico go to officer training school and try to become an officer. Rico ends up going to see Jelal, and finds that Jelal already had the paperwork ready. Rico enters Officer Candidate School for a second course of training, including further courses in "History and Moral Philosophy". En route from the Roughnecks to the school Rico encounters his father who has also enlisted and is now a corporal, and the two reconcile. He is also visited in school by Carmen, now an ensign and ship's pilot officer in the Navy, and the two discuss their friend Carl, who had been killed earlier in the war.

Rico is commissioned a temporary third lieutenant for his final test: a posting to a combat unit. Under the tutelage of his company commander, Captain Blackstone, and with the aid of his platoon sergeant, his boot camp drill instructor Fleet Sergeant Zim, Rico commands a platoon during "Operation Royalty," a raid to capture members of the Arachnid brain caste and queens. Rico then returns to the officer school to graduate.

The novel ends with him holding the rank of second lieutenant, in command of his old platoon in the Rodger Young, with his father as his platoon sergeant. The platoon has been renamed "Rico's Roughnecks", and is about to participate in an attack on Klendathu.

Themes

Robert Heinlein in 1976

Commentators have written that Starship Troopers is not driven by its plot, though it contains scenes of military combat. Instead, much of the novel is given over to a discussion of ideas. In particular, the discussion of political views is a recurring feature of what scholar Jeffrey Cass described as an "ideologically intense" book. A 1997 review in Salon categorized it as a "philosophical novel". Critics have debated to what extent the novel promotes Heinlein's own political views. Some contend that the novel maintains a sense of irony that allows readers to draw their own conclusions; others argue that Heinlein is sermonizing throughout the book, and that its purpose is to expound Heinlein's militaristic philosophy.

Militarism

Starship Troopers has been identified as being a part of a tradition in US science fiction that assumes that violent conflict and the militarization of society are inevitable and necessary. Although the Mobile Infantry, the unit to which Rico is assigned, is seen as a lowly post by the characters in the story, the novel itself suggests that it is the heart of the army and the most honorable unit in it. In a commentary written in 1980, Heinlein agreed that Starship Troopers "glorifies the military ... Specifically the P.B.I., the Poor Bloody Infantry, the mudfoot who places his frail body between his loved home and the war's desolation – but is rarely appreciated ... he has the toughest job of all and should be honored." The story is based on the social Darwinist idea of society as a struggle for survival based on military strength. It suggests that some conflicts must be resolved by force: one of the lessons Rico is repeatedly taught is that violence can be an effective method of settling conflict. These suggestions derive in part from Heinlein's view that in the 1950s the US government was being too conciliatory in its dealings with communist China and the Soviet Union.

Heinlein draws an analogy between the human society in the novel, which is well-to-do but needs to be vigilant against the imperialist threat of the Arachnids, and US society of the 1950s. Reviewers have suggested that the Arachnids are Heinlein's analogue for communists. Traits used to support this include the communal nature of the Arachnids, which makes them capable of a much higher degree of coordination than the humans. Bug society is once explicitly described as communist, and is moreover depicted as communist by nature; this has been read as implying that those with a different political ideology are analogous to alien beings. The related motifs of alien invasion, patriotism, and personal sacrifice during war, are present, as are other aspects of US popular culture of the 1950s. Commentators have argued that Heinlein's portrayal of aliens, as well as being a reference to 1950s communist countries, aims to "reinscribe the ideologies of America's mythic frontier history". The concept of the frontier includes a social-Darwinist argument of constantly fighting for survival, even at the expense of indigenous people or, in the case of Starship Troopers, of aliens. Heinlein suggests that without territorial expansion involving violent conquest of other races, humans would be destroyed. Scholar Jamie King has stated that Heinlein does not address the question of what the military government and Federal Service would do in peacetime, and argues that Heinlein has set up a society designed to be continuously at war, and to keep expanding its territory.

Coming of age

Starship Troopers has been referred to as a bildungsroman or "coming-of-age" story for Rico, as he matures through his tenure in the infantry. His training, both at boot camp and at officer candidate school, involves learning the value of militarism, thus inviting the reader to learn it as well. This is especially true of the parts of his training that involve indoctrination, such as the claim by one of his instructors that rule by military veterans is the ideal form of government, because only they understand how to put collective well-being above the individual. The story traces Rico's transformation from a boy into a soldier, while exploring issues of identity and motivation, and traces his overall moral and social development, in a manner identified by commentators as similar to many stories about German soldiers in World War I. Rico's transformation has been likened to the common narrative within stories with military themes by scholar H. Bruce Franklin. This typical narrative is that of a sloppy and unfit civilian being knocked into shape by tough officers, whose training is "calculated sadism" but is depicted as fundamentally being on the right side. The letter Rico receives from Dubois, partly responsible for Rico "crossing the hump" with his training, is shown as a turning point in his development. The classroom scenes embedded in the story serve to explain Rico's adventures, and highlight his reactions to events around. A notable example is the execution Rico is forced to witness after a deserter from his unit murders a young girl; Rico is uncertain of his own reaction until he remembers a lecture by Dubois in which the latter argues that "moral sense" derives entirely from the will to survive. The concept of the American frontier is also related to the coming-of-age theme. Young protagonists across Heinlein's novels attain manhood by confronting a hostile "wilderness" in space; coming-of-age in a military, alien context is a common theme in Heinlein's earlier works as well. Rico's coming-of-age has also been described as being related to his relationship with his father; the journey "outward" through the novel also contains a search for Rico's childhood and a reunion with his estranged parent.

Moral decline

Starship Troopers also critiques US society of the 1950s, suggesting that it led young people to be spoiled and undisciplined. These beliefs are expressed through the classroom lectures of Dubois, Rico's teacher for History and Moral Philosophy. Dubois praises flogging and other types of corporal punishment as a means of addressing juvenile crimes. It has been suggested that Heinlein endorsed this view, although the fact that Dubois also compares raising children to training a puppy has been used to argue that Heinlein was making use of irony. The story is strongly in favor of corporal punishment and capital punishment, as a means of correcting juvenile delinquents, part of a trend in science fiction which examines technology and outer space in an innovative manner, but is reactionary with respect to human relationships. As with other books by Heinlein, traditional schools are denigrated, while learning "on the spot" is extolled: Rico is able to master the things required of him in military training without undue difficulty.

Dubois also ridicules the idea of inalienable rights, such as "Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness", arguing that people have only the rights that they are willing to fight and die for to protect. The novel appeals to scientific authority to justify this position; Dubois repeatedly states that his argument is mathematically demonstrable, statements which have led scholars to label the novel "hard science fiction", despite its social and political themes. The "moral decline" caused by this situation is depicted as having caused a global war between an alliance of the US, Britain, and Russia against the "Chinese Hegemony" in the year 1987. Despite the alliance between the US and Russia, this war has been described as demonstrating Heinlein's anti-communist beliefs, which saw "swarming hordes" of Chinese as a bigger threat. The novel draws some comparisons between the Chinese and the Arachnids, and suggests that the lessons of one war could be applied to the other.

Reception

To Heinlein's surprise, Starship Troopers won the Hugo Award for Best Novel in 1960. It has been acknowledged as one of the best-known and most influential works of science fiction. The novel is considered a landmark for the genre, having been described by a 1960 review as one of the ten best genre books of 1959, in a 2009 review as a key science fiction novel of the 1950s, and as the best-known example of military science fiction. The novel has been described as marking Heinlein's transition from writing juvenile fiction to a "more mature phase" as an author. Reviewing the book with others written for children, Floyd C. Gale of Galaxy Science Fiction wrote in 1960 that "Heinlein has penned a juvenile that really is not. This is a new and bitter and disillusioned Heinlein". Rating it 2.5 stars out of five for children, 4.5 stars for adults, and "?" for civilians, he believed that the novel would be "of exceptional interest to veterans with battle experience ... but youngsters will find it melancholy and verbose". Conversely, Michael Moorcock described it as Heinlein's last "straight" science fiction, before he turned to more serious writing such as Stranger in a Strange Land.

By 1980, twenty years after its release, Starship Troopers had been translated into eleven languages and was still selling strongly. Heinlein nevertheless complained that, despite this success, almost all the mail he received about it was negative and he only heard about it "when someone wants to chew me out". The novel is highly contentious. Controversy surrounded its praise of the military and approval of violence, to the extent that it has frequently been described as fascist, and its implication that militarism is superior to traditional democracy. Heinlein's peers were among those who argued over the book; a comparison between a quote in Starship Troopers that "the noblest fate that a man can endure is to place his own mortal body between his loved home and war's desolation" and the anti-war poem "Dulce et Decorum Est" by Wilfred Owen began a two-year discussion in the Proceedings of the Institute for Twenty-First Century Studies from 1959 to 1961, with James Blish, Poul Anderson, Philip José Farmer, Anthony Boucher, John Brunner, Brian Aldiss, among those debating Starship Troopers's quality of writing, philosophy, and morality.

The writing in Starship Troopers has received varied responses, with the scenes of military training and combat receiving praise. In a 2009 retrospective, science-fiction writer Jo Walton wrote that Starship Troopers was "military SF done extremely well". She went on to argue that "Heinlein was absolutely at his peak when he wrote this in 1959. He had so much technical stylistic mastery of the craft of writing science fiction that he could 'backwards and in high heels' and get away with it." Others referred to it as very readable, and found the military scenes compelling. Heinlein's descriptions of training and boot camp in the novel, based on his own experiences in the military, have been described as being rendered with remarkable skill. A 1960 review in the New York Herald Tribune praised the "brilliantly written" passages describing infantry combat, and also called attention to the discussion of weapons and armor, which, according to other reviewers, demonstrated Heinlein's "undiminished talent for invention". Scholar George Slusser described the book in 1986 as the "ultimately convincing space-war epic", praising in particular the "precisely imagined" weapons and tactics, while a 1979 science fiction encyclopedia referred to it as the "slickest" of Heinlein's juvenile books.

Criticism of the style of the book has centered on its political aspects. Heinlein's discussions of his political beliefs were criticized as "didactic", and the novel was derided for "exposition inserted in large indigestible chunks". Author Ken MacLeod's 2003 analysis of the political nature of Starship Troopers stated that it was "a book where civics infodumps and accounts of brutal boot-camp training far outweigh the thin and tensionless combat scenes". Scientist and author Brunner compared it to a "Victorian children's book", while the Science Fiction Handbook published in 2009 said that the novel provided "compelling images of a futuristic military" and that it raised important questions, even for those who disagree with its political ideology. However, it stated that the story was weak as a tale of an alien encounter, as it did not explore alien society in any detail, but presented the Arachnids as nameless and faceless creatures that wished to destroy humanity. Boucher, founder of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, remarked in 1960 that Heinlein had "forgotten to insert a story". A 1979 summary said that though Heinlein's vision might verge on fascism, his tightly controlled narrative made his ideology seem "vibrantly appealing".

Criticism of militarism

Starship Troopers is generally considered to promote militarism, the glorification of war and of the military. Scholar Bruce Franklin referred to it in 1980 as a "bugle-blowing, drum-beating glorification" of military service, and wrote that militarism and imperialism were the explicit message of the book. Science fiction writer Dean McLaughlin called it "a book-length recruiting poster". In 1968 science fiction critic Alexei Panshin called Starship Troopers a militaristic polemic and compared it to a recruiting film, stating that it "purports to show the life of a typical soldier, with a soundtrack commentary by earnest sincere Private Jones who interprets what we see for us." Panshin stated that there was no "sustained human conflict" in the book: instead, "All the soldiers we see are tough, smart, competent, cleancut, clean-shaven, and noble." Panshin, a veteran of the peacetime military, argued that Heinlein glossed over the reality of military life, and that the Terran Federation-Arachnid conflict existed simply because, "Starship troopers are not half so glorious sitting on their butts polishing their weapons for the tenth time for lack of anything else to do." Literature scholar George Slusser, in describing the novel as "wrong-headed and retrogressive", argued that calling its ideology militarism or imperialism was inadequate, as these descriptions suggested an economic motive. Slusser instead says that Heinlein advocates for a complete "technological subjugation of nature", of which the Arachnids are a symbol, and that this subjugation itself is depicted as a sign of human advancement.

A 1997 review of the film in Salon stated that the novel could almost be described as propaganda, and was terrifying as a result, particularly in its belief that the boot camp had to be an ingredient of any civilization. This was described as a highly unusual utopian vision. Moorcock stated that the lessons Rico learns in boot camp: "wars are inevitable, that the army is always right". In discussing the book's utility in classroom discussions of the form of government, Alan Myers stated that its depiction of the military was of an "unashamedly Earth-chauvinist nature". In the words of science fiction scholar Darko Suvin, Starship Troopers was an "unsubtle but powerful black-and-white paean to combat life", and an example of agitprop in favor of military values.

Other writers defended Heinlein. George Price argued that " implies, first, that war is something endured, not enjoyed, and second, that war is so unpleasant, so desolate, that it must at all costs be kept away from one's home." Poul Anderson also defended some of the novel's positions, arguing "Heinlein has recognized the problem of selective versus nonselective franchise, and his proposed solution does merit discussion." Complaints were made against Heinlein for the lack of conscription in Starship Troopers. When he wrote the novel, the military draft was still in effect in the US.

Allegations of fascism

The society within the book has frequently been described as fascist. According to the 2009 Science Fiction Handbook, it had the effect of giving Heinlein a reputation as a "fanatical warmongering fascist". Scholar Jeffrey Cass has referred to the setting of the book as "unremittingly grim fascism". He has stated that the novel made an analogy between its military conflict and those of the US after World War II, and that it justified American imperialism in the name of fighting another form of imperialism. Jasper Goss has referred to it as "crypto-fascist". Suvin compares Heinlein's suggestion that "all wars arise from population pressure" to the Nazi concept of Lebensraum or "living space" for a superior society that was used to justify territorial expansion.

Some reviewers have suggested that Heinlein was simply discussing the merits of a selective versus a nonselective franchise. Heinlein made a similar claim, over two decades after Starship Troopers's publication, in his Expanded Universe and further claimed that 95 percent of "veterans" were not military personnel but members of the civil service. Heinlein's own description has been disputed, even among the book's defenders. Heinlein scholar James Gifford has argued that a number of quotes within the novel suggest that the characters within the book assume that the Federal Service is largely military. For instance, when Rico tells his father that he is interested in Federal Service, his father immediately explains his belief that Federal Service is a bad idea because there is no war in progress, indicating that he sees Federal Service as military in nature. Gifford states that although Heinlein's intentions may have been that Federal Service be 95 percent non-military, in relation to the actual contents of the book, Heinlein "is wrong on this point. Flatly so."

Dennis Showalter, writing in 1975, defended Starship Troopers, stating that the society depicted in it did not contain many elements of fascism. He argues that the novel does not include outright opposition to Bolshevism and liberalism that would be expected in a fascist society. Others have responded by saying Showalter's argument is based on a literal reading of the novel, and that the story glorifies militarism to a large extent. Ken Macleod argues that the book does not actually advocate fascism because anybody capable of understanding the oath of Federal Service is able to enlist and thereby obtain political power. Macleod states that Heinlein's books are consistently liberal, but cover a spectrum from democratic to elitist forms of liberalism, Starship Troopers being on the latter end of the spectrum. It has been argued that Heinlein's militarism is more libertarian than fascist, and that this trend is also present in Heinlein's other popular books of the period, such as Stranger in a Strange Land (1961) and The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress (1966). This period of Heinlein's writing has received more critical attention than any other, although he continued to write into the 1980s.

Apparent utopianism

The setting of the book is presented by Heinlein as utopian; its leaders are shown as good and wise, and the population as free and prosperous. Slusser wrote in 1987 that Starship Troopers depicts a world that is "hell for human beings", but nonetheless celebrates the ideology of its fictional society. The rulers are claimed to be the best in history, because they understand that human nature is to fight for power through the use of force. The suggestion of utopia is not explored in depth, as the lives of those outside the military are not shown in any detail. The novel suggests that the militarist philosophy espoused by many of the characters has a mathematical backing, though reviewers have commented that Heinlein does not present any basis for this.

Writers such as Farmer, Robert A. W. Lowndes, and Michael Moorcock have criticized the novel for being a hypothetical utopia, in the sense that while Heinlein's ideas sound plausible, they have never been put to the test. Moorcock wrote an essay entitled "Starship Stormtroopers" in which he attacked Heinlein and other writers over similar "Utopian fiction". Lowndes accused Heinlein of using straw man arguments, "countering ingenuous half-truths with brilliant half-truths". Lowndes further argued that the Terran Federation could never be as idealistic as Heinlein portrays it to be because he never properly addressed "whether or not have at least as full a measure of civil redress against official injustice as we have today". Farmer agreed, arguing that a "world ruled by veterans would be as mismanaged, graft-ridden, and insane as one ruled by men who had never gotten near the odor of blood and guts".

Race and gender

Authors and commentators have stated that the manner in which the extraterrestrial beings are portrayed in Starship Troopers has racist aspects, arguing that the nicknames "Bugs" and "Skinnies" carry racial overtones. John Brunner compared them to calling Koreans "gooks". Slusser argued that the term "Bugs" was an "abusive and biologically inaccurate" word that justified the violence against alien beings, a tendency which, according to Slusser, the book shared with other commercially successful science fiction.

Some of Heinlein's other works have also been described as racist, though Franklin argues that this was not unique to Heinlein, and that he was less racist than the US government of the time. Heinlein's early novel Sixth Column was called a "racist paean" to a white resistance movement against an Asian horde derived from the Yellow Peril. In 1978, Moorcock wrote that Starship Troopers "set the pattern for Heinlein's more ambitious paternalistic, xenophobic" stories. Robert Lowndes argues that the war between the Terrans and the Arachnids is not about a quest for racial purity, but rather an extension of Heinlein's belief that man is a wild animal. According to this theory, if man lacks a moral compass beyond the will to survive, and he was confronted by another species with a similar lack of morality, then the only possible moral result would be warfare.

The fact that all pilots in the novel are women (in contrast to the infantry, which is entirely male) has been cited as evidence of progressive gender politics within the story, although the idea expressed by Rico that women are the motivation for men to fight in the military is a counter-example to this. A 1996 science fiction encyclopedia said that like much of Heinlein's fiction, Starship Troopers exemplified "macho male culture". The prosthetically enhanced soldiers in the novel, all of whom are men, have been described as an example of the "hyper-masculinity" brought on by the proximity of these men to technology. The story portrays the Arachnids as so alien that the only response to them can be war. Feminist scholars have described this reaction as a "conventionally masculinist" one. Steffen Hantke has described the mechanized suits in the novel, which make the wearer resemble a "steel gorilla," as defining masculinity as "something intensely physical, based on animal power, instinct, and aggression". He calls this form of masculinity "all body, so to speak, and no brain". Thus, in Hantke's reading, Starship Troopers expresses fears of how masculinity may be preserved in an environment of high technology. This fear is exacerbated by the motifs of pregnancy and birth that Heinlein uses when describing how the soldiers in suits are dropped from spaceships piloted by women. Though Rico says he finds women "marvelous", he shows no desire for sexual activity; the war seems to have subsumed sex in this respect. A 1979 summary argued that despite the gestures towards women's equality, women in the story were still objects, to be protected, and to fight wars over.

Influence

A real-life concept of powered armor, an idea popularized by Starship Troopers

Heinlein's books, and Starship Troopers in particular, had an enormous impact on political science fiction, to the extent that author Ken MacLeod has stated that "the political strand in can be described as a dialogue with Heinlein," although many participants in this dialogue disagree with Heinlein. Science fiction critic Darko Suvin states that Starship Troopers is the "ancestral text of US science fiction militarism" and that it shaped the debate about the role of the military in society for many years.

In addition to his political views, Heinlein's ideas about a futuristic military as depicted in the novel were deeply influential among films, books, and television shows in later years. Roger Beaumont has suggested that Starship Troopers may some day be considered a manual for extraterrestrial warfare. Suvin refers to Juan Rico as the "archetypal Space Soldier". Starship Troopers included concepts in military engineering which have since been widely used in other fiction, and which have occasionally been paralleled by scientific research. The novel has been cited as the source of the idea of powered armor exoskeletons, which Heinlein describes in great detail. Such suits became a staple of military science fiction. Franchises that have employed this technology include Iron Man, Exo Squad, Halo, District 9, Elysium, and Edge of Tomorrow. During the shooting of the science fiction film Aliens, director James Cameron required the actors playing space marines to read Starship Troopers to understand their parts, and also cited it as an influence for the space drop, terms like "bug hunt", and the cargo-loader exoskeleton.

Starship Troopers had a direct influence on many later science fiction stories. John Steakley's 1984 novel Armor was, according to the author, born out of frustration with the small amount of actual combat in Starship Troopers and because he wanted this aspect developed further. The "Mobile Suits" from the 1979 Nippon Sunrise anime series Mobile Suit Gundam were inspired by the powered armor from Starship Troopers. The 1988 Gainax OVA series Gunbuster has plot elements similar to Starship Troopers, depicting humanity arrayed against an alien military. Scholars have identified elements of Heinlein's influence in Ender's Game, by Orson Scott Card, as well. Hantke, in particular, compares the battle room in Ender's Game to Heinlein's prosthetic suits, stating that they both regulate but also enhance human agency. Suvin suggests parallels between the plots of the two novels, with human society in both stories at war against insect-like aliens, but states that the story of Ender Wiggin takes a very different direction, as Ender regrets his genocidal actions and dedicates his efforts to protecting his erstwhile targets.

Conversely, Joe Haldeman's 1974 anti-war, Hugo- and Nebula-winning science fiction novel The Forever War is popularly thought to be a direct reply to Starship Troopers, and though Haldeman has stated that it is actually a result of his personal experiences in the Vietnam War, he has admitted to being influenced by Starship Troopers. Haldeman said that he disagreed with Starship Troopers because it "glorifies war", but added that "it's a very well-crafted novel, and I believe Heinlein was honest with it". The Forever War contains several parallels to Starship Troopers, including its setting. Commentators have described it as a reaction to Heinlein's novel, a suggestion Haldeman denies; the two novels are very different in terms of their attitude towards the military. The Forever War does not depict war as a noble pursuit, with the sides clearly defined as good and evil; instead, the novel explores the dehumanizing effect of war, influenced by the real world context of the Vietnam War. Haldeman received a letter from Heinlein, congratulating him on his Nebula Award, which "meant more than the award itself". According to author Spider Robinson, Heinlein approached Haldeman at the awards banquet and said the book "may be the best future war story I've ever read!"

Harry Harrison's 1965 novel Bill, the Galactic Hero has also been described as a reaction to Starship Troopers, while Gordon R. Dickson's 1961 novel Naked to the Stars has been called "an obvious rejoinder" to Starship Troopers. Ring of Swords, written by Eleanor Arnason in 1993, also depicts a war between two highly aggressive species, of which humans are one. The story deliberately inverts several aspects of Starship Troopers: the story is told from the point of view of diplomats seeking to prevent war, rather than soldiers fighting it, and the conflict is the result of the two species being extremely similar, rather than different.

Adaptations

1997 film

Main article: Starship Troopers (film) Further information: Starship Troopers (franchise)

The film rights to the novel were licensed in the 1990s, several years after Heinlein's death. The project was originally entitled Bug Hunt at Outpost Nine, and had been in production before the producers bought the rights to Starship Troopers. The film was directed by Paul Verhoeven (who found the book too boring to finish), and released in 1997. The screenplay, by Ed Neumeier, shared character names and some plot details with the novel. The film contained several elements that differed from the book, including a military that is completely integrated with respect to sex. It had the stated intention of treating its material in an ironic or sarcastic manner, to undermine the political ideology of the novel. The mechanized suits that featured prominently in the novel were absent from the film, due to budget constraints.

The film utilized fascist imagery throughout, including portraying the Terran Federation's personnel wearing uniforms strongly reminiscent of those worn by the SS, the Nazi paramilitary. Verhoeven stated in 1997 that the first scene of the film – an advertisement for the Mobile Infantry – was adapted shot-for-shot from a scene in Leni Riefenstahl's Triumph of the Will (1935), specifically an outdoor rally for the Reichsarbeitsdienst. Other references to Nazism include the Albert Speer-style architecture and the propagandistic dialogue ("Violence is the supreme authority!"). According to Verhoeven, the references to Nazism reflected his own experience in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands during World War II.

The film reignited the debate over the nature of the Terran society in Heinlein's world, and several critics accused Verhoeven of creating a fascist universe. Others, and Verhoeven himself, have stated that the film was intended to be ironic, and to critique fascism. The film has also been described as criticizing the jingoism of US foreign policy, the military industrial complex, and the society in the film, which elevates violence over sensitivity. It received several negative critical reviews, reviewers suggesting that it was unsophisticated and targeted a juvenile audience, although some scholars and critics have also supported its description as satirical. The absence of the powered armor technology drew criticism from fans. The success of the film's endeavor to critique the ideology of the novel has been disputed.

Four sequels, Starship Troopers 2: Hero of the Federation (2004), Starship Troopers 3: Marauder (2008), Starship Troopers: Invasion (2012) and Starship Troopers: Traitor of Mars (2017) were released as straight-to-DVD films. In December 2011, Neal H. Moritz, producer of films such as the Fast & Furious series and I Am Legend, announced plans for a remake of the film that he claims will be more faithful to the source material. In 2016 Mark Swift and Damian Shannon were reported to be writing the film.

Animated series

Main article: Roughnecks: Starship Troopers Chronicles

An animated TV series was also released is based both on the novel and 1997 film called Roughnecks: Starship Troopers Chronicles. It follows the exploits of the Mobile Infantry squad, "Razak's Roughnecks", during the SICON–Bugs War between a newly united humanity and an extraterrestrial race, known as the "Bugs," also sometimes referred to as Arachnids. The show focuses mainly on the Roughnecks' missions, rather than addressing the larger war. Paul Verhoeven served as an executive producer. The show ran for one season from August 1999 to April 2000.

Other media

From October to December 1988, Sunrise and Bandai Visual produced a six-episode Japanese original video animation locally titled Uchū no Senshi with mobile infantry power armor designs by Kazutaka Miyatake, based on Starship Troopers. Dark Horse Comics, Mongoose Publishing and Markosia hold the license to produce comic books based on Starship Troopers, written by authors including Warren Ellis, Gordon Rennie and Tony Lee. Avalon Hill published Robert Heinlein's Starship Troopers in 1976, a map-and-counter board wargame featuring a number of scenarios as written in the novel. In 1998, Mythic Entertainment released Starship Troopers: Battlespace. The web-based interactive game, in which players battled each other in overhead space combat, allowed players to assume either Klendathu or Federation roles, was developed alongside the film adaptation. Starship Troopers: The Miniatures Game was released by Mongoose Publishing in 2005, a miniature wargame which used material from the novel, film, and animated TV series. Spectre Media released Starship Troopers: Invasion Mobile Infantry, a game for PCs, in 2012. Offworld Industries developed and published the 2023 game Starship Troopers: Extermination, a cooperative multiplayer FPS available for PC.

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