Fr. 68.00

Zone Theory - Science Fiction and Utopia in the Space of Possible Worlds

English · Paperback / Softback

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«This book elaborates a structure for the general family of utopian genres with marvelous clarity, and with it established, Popov can pursue all kinds of further insights about the relationships between these texts. As the world's situation becomes more desperate, and the need for a new political economy more obvious, this complicated canon is becoming increasingly important: no longer just a minor literary genre, but rather a crucial aid to thinking about our social systems. The better we understand utopian narrative strategies, the more fully we can put them to use, so Popov's excellent study is timely and interesting.»
(Kim Stanley Robinson, author of the Mars Trilogy and The Ministry for the Future)

«Alexander Popov's Zone Theory deftly guides us through the thickets of utopian theory and shows us why we should care, with fresh and convincing readings of a variety of science fictional texts. The writers explored here range from the usual suspects-Le Guin, Delany, Kim Stanley Robinson-to some not usually classed as utopian or dystopian, such as John Crowley and Brooke Bolander. Popov builds on the work of Tom Moylan and Fredric Jameson while adding important perspectives such as considering utopia as a hyperobject and using utopian theory to read the incongruous, unresolvable Zones of science fiction such as the Strugatskys' Roadside Picnic and Jeff VanderMeer's Southern Reach trilogy. I am happy to do as Popov suggests: to read utopias not only as ongoing processes rather than finished blueprints, as Moylan has taught us, but also to see them as a way of learning about the world. Utopia, says Popov, is "an apparatus for registering difference at the level of societal organization" and thus is always open to new discoveries and new antinomies: anti-utopias lead to anti-anti-utopias and so on without end.»
(Brian Attebery, Emeritus Professor of English and Philosophy at Idaho State University, author of Stories about Stories: Fantasy & the Remaking of Myth)

Zone Theory reinterprets utopia as an unceasing dialectic between totality and novelty which keeps on discovering new subjectivities and genres. Through close readings within a wide corpus of SF works, it meditates on utopian forms such as critical utopia, critical dystopia, heterotopia, atopia and ecotopia, ultimately tying them to the notion of anti-anti-utopia: a form of forms capacious enough to house a permanently open multiplicity of beings.

List of contents

Table of Contents
List of Figures
Preface
Acknowledgements
Permissions
Part One. Maps
Chapter One: Between Model and Monster
Chapter Two: Modalizing Utopia
Chapter Three: Six Excursuses on Modal Science Fiction
Chapter Four: The Utopian Diagram
Part Two. Fold
Chapter Five: Topologies of Revolutionary Time. Critical Utopia, Critical Dystopia, Heterotopia
Chapter Six: Non/Inhuman Spaces and Economies of the Self
Chapter Seven: Anti-Anti-Utopia and Totality
Part Three. Unfold
Chapter Eight: Rewriting Myth and Genre. Narrative Modalities and Possible Worlds
Chapter Nine: A Cartography of Zones. Inhuman Spaces and Ontological Ruination
Part Four. Refold
Chapter Ten: Staying with the Singularity. Nonhuman Narrators and More-than-Human Mythologies
Chapter Eleven: Anti-Anti-Utopia Redux. Utopia as Virus
Bibliography
Index

About the author










Alexander Popov is Assistant Professor at Sofia University 'St. Kliment Ohridski', where he teaches linguistics and science fiction. Zone Theory is his first monograph.

Report

"This book elaborates a structure for the general family of utopian genres with marvelous clarity, and with it established, Popov can pursue all kinds of further insights about the relationships between these texts. As the world's situation becomes more desperate, and the need for a new political economy more obvious, this complicated canon is becoming increasingly important: no longer just a minor literary genre, but rather a crucial aid to thinking about our social systems. The better we understand utopian narrative strategies, the more fully we can put them to use, so Popov's excellent study is timely and interesting." Kim Stanley Robinson, author of the Mars Trilogy and The Ministry for the Future "Alexander Popov's Zone Theory deftly guides us through the thickets of utopian theory and shows us why we should care, with fresh and convincing readings of a variety of science fictional texts. The writers explored here range from the usual suspects-Le Guin, Delany, Kim Stanley Robinson-to some not usually classed as utopian or dystopian, such as John Crowley and Brooke Bolander. Popov builds on the work of Tom Moylan and Fredric Jameson while adding important perspectives such as considering utopia as a hyperobject and using utopian theory to read the incongruous, unresolvable Zones of science fiction such as the Strugatskys' Roadside Picnic and Jeff VanderMeer's Southern Reach trilogy. I am happy to do as Popov suggests: to read utopias not only as ongoing processes rather than finished blueprints, as Moylan has taught us, but also to see them as a way of learning about the world. Utopia, says Popov, is "an apparatus for registering difference at the level of societal organization" and thus is always open to new discoveries and new antinomies: anti-utopias lead to anti-anti-utopias and so on without end." Brian Attebery, Emeritus Professor of English and Philosophy at Idaho State University, author of Stories about Stories: Fantasy & the Remaking of Myth

Product details

Authors Alexander Popov
Assisted by Raffaella Baccolini (Editor), Antonis Balasopoulos (Editor), Joachim Fischer (Editor), Michael G. Kelly (Editor), Tom Moylan (Editor), Tom Moylan et al (Editor), Phillip E. Wegner (Editor)
Publisher Peter Lang
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 10.07.2023
 
EAN 9781800794382
ISBN 978-1-80079-438-2
No. of pages 350
Dimensions 152 mm x 19 mm x 229 mm
Weight 533 g
Illustrations 9 Abb.
Series Ralahine Utopian Studies
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative linguistics

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