The first fictional space habitat proper (not counting the unintentional one in "The Brick Moon") was featured in the 1931 novella "
The Prince of Space" by
Jack Williamson; Besides cylinders, space habitats in fiction also come in the shapes of spheres, wheels, and hollowed-out asteroids, among others. A more unusual depiction is seen in
James Blish's 1955 book
Earthman, Come Home—as well as the rest of his
Cities in Flight series—where they are cities roaming through space. Space habitats featured only intermittently in science fiction until 1977, when
Gerard K. O'Neill's
speculative nonfiction book
The High Frontier: Human Colonies in Space was published and went on to inspire numerous authors. The works inspired by O'Neill range from
utopian to dystopian; the latter foresee a wide variety of problems with space habitats, including dilapidation while humans are still living there, vulnerability to sabotage, and the potential for a wealthy elite in space to exploit the inhabitants of Earth. A recurring theme in these works is tensions between the inhabitants of the habitats and planet-dwellers. Inasmuch as they provide opportunities for telling stories of isolated populations with diverse cultures, space habitats serve the same function in space that islands serve on Earth in earlier
speculative fiction, though some science fiction works such as the TV series
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and
Babylon 5 take the opposite approach of portraying space habitats as multicultural centres where members of different spacefaring civilizations coexist peacefully. ==See also==