Fr. 155.00

Wars We Never Fought - Armed Conflict in Speculative Fiction

English · Hardback

Will be released 11.12.2025

Description

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A collection of essays examining how armed conflict functions as a subject, theme, metaphor, symbol, or plot device in popular works of speculative fiction, including novels, films, television, and video games. Speculative fiction - genres such as science fiction, fantasy, utopian/dystopian, apocalyptic/post-apocalyptic, supernatural, horror, superhero, and alternative history - is, at this particular cultural moment, incontrovertibly popular. Despite the fact that war and its social, cultural, political, and moral consequences are often a driving force in speculative fiction narratives, exerting outsized influence on character development, structuring plot and conflict, and serving as a vehicle to explore various themes, there has been little critical attention given specifically to the intersection of these concepts. Wars We Never Fought remedies this problem, as contributors analyze such popular texts as the Star Wars franchise, Ann Leckie''s Imperial Radch trilogy, Dune , Mary Doria Russell''s The Sparrow and Children of God , The Expanse series, Captain Marvel , and the Fallout game franchise. These essays offer accessible and wide-ranging critical insight into how and why creators of speculative fiction use war as a device within the diegetic worlds of their stories. They also look at what the depictions of war and warriors within these texts suggest regarding notions such as race, class, gender, sexuality, difference, sociopolitical power, and other cultural values. Contextualizing the culture in which these narratives are created and consumed, Wars We Never Fought demonstrates how the textual dramatization of entirely fictitious wars might reflect, interrogate, and even structure understanding of warfare in the "real world."

About the author

Matthew B. Hill, PhD, is Professor of English in the Humanities Department at Coppin State University, in Baltimore, MD. His work focuses on 20th and 21st century warfare in literature, film, and popular culture. His previous books include Dystopian States of America: Apocalyptic Visions and Warnings in Literature and Film (ABC-CLIO 2022) and Unconventional Warriors: The Fantasy of the American Resistance Fighter in Film and Television (Praeger 2018). He is the co-editor, with Andrew Schopp, of The War on Terror and American Popular Culture (2009). His essays have appeared in War, Literature, and the Arts, The Mid-Atlantic Almanack, The Journal of Popular Culture, Extrapolation, and The Journal of American Culture.Leigha McReynolds is Assistant Clinical Professor at University of Maryland, USA, and teaches literature classes for the local D.C. bookstore Politics and Prose. She teaches and researches at the intersection of disability and science fiction, with a focus on eugenics and genetics. Her most recent publication is the chapter “Locations of Deviance: A Eugenics Reading of Dune” in Discovering Dune (2022).

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