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Paik, Peter Y. From Utopia to Apocalypse: Science Fiction and the Politics of Catastrophe. Minneapolis: Univ. of Minnesota Press, 2010. Added by: joachim (6/13/10, 1:39 PM) |
Resource type: Book Language: en: English ID no. (ISBN etc.): 978-0-8166-5078-1 BibTeX citation key: Paik2010 Email resource to friend View all bibliographic details |
Categories: General Keywords: "Marvelman", "Miracleman", "Nausicaä", "V for Vendetta", "Watchmen", Apocalypse, Gibbons. Dave, Japan, Lloyd. David, Manga, Miyazaki. Hayao, Moore. Alan, Science Fiction, Superhero, United Kingdom, Utopia Creators: Paik Publisher: Univ. of Minnesota Press (Minneapolis) |
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Abstract |
The pitfalls and limitations of utopian politics as revealed by science fiction. Revolutionary narratives in recent science fiction graphic novels and films compel audiences to reflect on the politics and societal ills of the day. Through character and story, science fiction brings theory to life, giving shape to the motivations behind the action as well as to the consequences they produce. In From Utopia to Apocalypse, Peter Y. Paik shows how science fiction generates intriguing and profound insights into politics. He reveals that the fantasy of putting annihilating omnipotence to beneficial effect underlies the revolutionary projects that have defined the collective upheavals of the modern age. Paik traces how this political theology is expressed, and indeed literalized, in popular superhero fiction, examining works including Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons’s graphic novel Watchmen, the science fiction cinema of Jang Joon-Hwan, the manga of Hayao Miyazaki, Alan Moore’s V for Vendetta, and the Matrix trilogy. Superhero fantasies are usually seen as compensations for individual feelings of weakness, victimization, and vulnerability. But Paik presents these fantasies as social constructions concerned with questions of political will and the disintegration of democracy rather than with the psychology of the personal. What is urgently at stake, Paik argues, is a critique of the limitations and deadlocks of the political imagination. The utopias dreamed of by totalitarianism, which must be imposed through torture, oppression, and mass imprisonment, nevertheless persist in liberal political systems. With this reality looming throughout, Paik demonstrates the uneasy juxtaposition of saintliness and cynically manipulative realpolitik, of torture and the assertion of human dignity, of cruelty and benevolence. Table of Contents Introduction: The God That Succeeded (1) 1. Utopia Achieved: The Case of Watchmen (23) 2. The Defense of Necessity: On Jang Joon-Hwan’s Save the Green Planet (71) 3. The Saintly Politics of Catastrophe: Hayao Miyazaki’s Nausicaä of the Valley of Wind (93) 4. Between Trauma and Tragedy: From The Matrix to V for Vendetta (123) Acknowledgments (183) Notes (185) Index (201) Added by: joachim Last edited by: joachim |