Cover image for Futurescapes : Space in Utopian and Science Fiction Discourses.
Futurescapes : Space in Utopian and Science Fiction Discourses.
Title:
Futurescapes : Space in Utopian and Science Fiction Discourses.
Author:
Pordzik, Ralph.
ISBN:
9789042026032
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (367 pages)
Series:
Spatial Practices: An Interdisciplinary Series in Cultural History, Geography and Literature, 9 ; v.9

Spatial Practices: An Interdisciplinary Series in Cultural History, Geography and Literature, 9
Contents:
CONTENTS -- Acknowledgements -- Notes on Contributors -- Introduction: The Overlaid Spaces of Utopia -- CHAPTER I CONSTRUCTING BORDERS, DEFINING LIMITS: THE IDEAL SPACE OF UTOPIA REVISITED -- The Translation of Paradise: Thomas More's Utopia and the Poetics of Cultural Exchange -- Utopia, Nation-Building, and the Dissolution of the Nation-State Around 1900 -- Discoveries of the Future: Herbert G. Wells and the Eugenic Utopia -- Persistence of Obedience: Theological Space and Ritual Conversion in George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four -- CHAPTER II HOMELY SPACES, INTIMATE BORDERS - UTOPIAS TO LIVE IN -- 'And is not every Manor a Little Common Wealth?' Nostalgia, Utopia and the Country House -- The Watchdogs of Eden: Chesterton and Buchan Look at the Present of the Future -- The Land that Time Forgot: Fictions of Antarctic Temporality -- "The Tower of Babble"? The Role and Function of Fictive Languages in Utopian and Dystopian Fiction -- CHAPTER III WORLDS BEYOND WORLDS - THE LIMITS OF GEOGRAPHICAL AND PERCEPTUAL SPACE -- Rethinking Deterritorialization: Utopian and Apocalyptic Space in Recent American Fiction -- Space Construction as Cultural Practice: Reading William Gibson's Neuromancer with Respect to Postmodern Concepts of Space -- Peripheral Cosmopolitans: Caribbeanness as Transnational Utopia? -- "Utopian and Cynical Elements": Chaplin, Cinema, and Weimar Critical Theory -- Index.
Abstract:
This book testifies to the growing interest in the many spaces of utopia . It intends to 'map out' on utopian and science-fiction discourses some of the new and revisionist models of spatial analysis applied in Literary and Cultural Studies in recent years. The aim of the volume is to side-step the established generic binary of utopia and dystopia or science fiction and thus to open the analysis of utopian literature to new lines of inquiry. The essays collected here propose to think of utopias not so much as fictional texts about future change and transformation but as vital elements in a cultural process through which social, spatial and subjective identities are formed. Utopias can thus be read as textual systems implying a distinct spatial and temporal dimension; as 'spatial practices' that tend to naturalize a cultural and social construction - that of the 'good life', the radically improved welfare state, the Christian paradise, the counter-society, etc. - and make that representation operational by interpellating their readers in some determinate relation to their givenness as sites of political and individual improvement. This volume is of interest for all scholars and students of literature who wish to explore the ways in which utopias of the past and recent present have circulated as media of cultural exchange and homogenization, as sites of cultural and linguistic appropriation and as foci for the spatial formation of national and regional identities in the English-speaking world.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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