Suicide and Contemporary Science Fiction

2016-02-04


Suicide and Contemporary Science Fiction

Carlos Gutiérrez-Jones 2015


E-Book: 224 English pages

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Price: 1000 Toman

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Suicide and Contemporary Science Fiction examines the fascination with suicidal crises evident in a range of science fiction. Specifically, this study explores a seemingly counterintuitive proposition: in moments of dramatic scientific and technological change, the authors of these works frequently cast self-destructive episodes as catalysts for beneficial change. Carlos Gutierrez-Jones argues that this creative self-destruction mechanism is invoked by H. G. Wells as a means of negotiating Victorian anxieties regarding evolutionary theory, by Stanislaw Lem as he wrestles with the prospect of nuclear self-destruction at the dawn of the space age, by William Gibson as he considers the development of artificial intelligence, by Christopher Nolan as he explores the cybernetic colonization of the unconscious, by Rian Johnson as he links aspects of video gaming to the neoliberal militarization of institutions, and by Margaret Atwood as she considers impending ecological disaster and the rise of bioterrorism. These authors often depict such scientific and technological changes in a fashion that requires the central characters to transform themselves in hopes of remaining relevant in a radically altered environment.

About the Author

Carl Gutiérrez-Jones is Professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara. His research interests include American studies, contemporary fiction, critical race studies, the literature of human rights, and science fiction. Gutiérrez-Jones is the author of Critical Race Narratives: A Study of Race, Rhetoric, and Injury and Rethinking the Borderlands: Between Chicano Narrative and Legal Discourse, as well as several co-edited volumes and numerous articles on literature, film, legal studies and cultural theory.


 

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