Speculative Fictions

Speculative Fictions
Title Speculative Fictions PDF eBook
Author Herb Wyile
Publisher McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages 348
Release 2002
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780773523159

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An exploration of the proliferation of historical novels in English-Canadian literature over the last thirty years.

Speculative Fictions

Speculative Fictions
Title Speculative Fictions PDF eBook
Author Elizabeth Hewitt
Publisher Oxford University Press
Total Pages 345
Release 2020-06-26
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0192602993

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Speculative Fictions places Alexander Hamilton at the center of American literary history to consider the important intersections between economics and literature. By studying Hamilton as an economic and imaginative writer, it argues that we can recast the conflict with the Jeffersonians as a literary debate about the best way to explain and describe modern capitalism, and explores how various other literary forms allow us to comprehend the complexities of a modern global economy in entirely new ways. Speculative Fictions identifies two overlooked literary genres of the late eighteenth-century as exemplary of this narrative mode. It asks that we read periodical essays and Black Atlantic captivity narratives with an eye not towards bourgeois subject formation, but as descriptive analyses of economic systems. In doing so, we discover how these two literary genres offer very different portraits of a global economy than that rendered by the novel, the imaginative genre we are most likely to associate with modern capitalism. Developing an aesthetic appreciation for the speculative, digressive, and unsystematic plotlines of these earlier narratives has the capacity to generate new imaginative projects with which to make sense of our increasingly difficult economic world.

Netflix’s Speculative Fictions

Netflix’s Speculative Fictions
Title Netflix’s Speculative Fictions PDF eBook
Author Colin Jon Mark Crawford
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages 133
Release 2020-12-10
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1793625298

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Netflix’s Speculative Fictions: Financializing Platform Television argues that Netflix’s scaled expansion has hinged upon its ability not only to create, but more importantly to communicate, new forms and flows of potential value in platform capitalism, wherein capital is mobilized not only from direct revenue streams but also the new value assigned to inputs and investments of data, debt, attention, behavior, taste, time, sociality, and speculation. To interpret and critique these new communications and projections of value, Colin Jon Mark Crawford performs a discursive analysis of the platform television industry leader Netflix and its ‘investor lore’: the multi-sited narrative of value found in the company’s investor relations materials and corporate communications, such as letters to shareholders, financial earnings reports, executive interviews, press releases, and blog posts. Netflix best represents the increasingly ubiquitous nexus of culture, tech, and finance industries that is platform television. To better understand the emergent financial logics of this relatively new media industry, we must first understand the speculative narratives and discourses of value which organize it. Scholars of media studies, television studies, technology studies, and economics will find this book particularly useful.

The Imagined Arctic in Speculative Fiction

The Imagined Arctic in Speculative Fiction
Title The Imagined Arctic in Speculative Fiction PDF eBook
Author Maria Lindgren Leavenworth
Publisher Taylor & Francis
Total Pages 187
Release 2023-07-31
Genre Fiction
ISBN 1000915395

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The Imagined Arctic in Speculative Fiction explores the ways in which the Arctic is imagined and what function it is made to serve in a selection of speculative fictions: non-mimetic works that start from the implied question "What if?" Spanning slightly more than two centuries of speculative fiction, from the starting point in Mary Shelley’s 1818 Frankenstein to contemporary works that engage with the vast ramifications of anthropogenic climate change, analyses demonstrate how Arctic discourses are supported or subverted and how new Arctics are added to the textual tradition. To illuminate wider lines of inquiry informing the way the world is envisioned, humanity’s place and function in it, and more-than-human entanglements, analyses focus on the function of the actual Arctic and how this function impacts and is impacted by speculative elements. With effects of climate change training the global eye on the Arctic, and as debates around future northern cultural, economic and environmental sustainability intensify, there is a need for a deepened understanding of the discourses that have constructed and are constructing the Arctic. A careful mapping and serious consideration of both past and contemporary speculative visions thus illuminate the role the Arctic has played and may come to play in a diverse set of practices and fields.

Biopolitical Futures in Twenty-First-Century Speculative Fiction

Biopolitical Futures in Twenty-First-Century Speculative Fiction
Title Biopolitical Futures in Twenty-First-Century Speculative Fiction PDF eBook
Author Sherryl Vint
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 283
Release 2021-10-07
Genre History
ISBN 1108839002

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A theorization of how the bioeconomy and biotechnology remake 'life itself,' creating crises in ethics and governance.

Dystopia in Arabic Speculative Fiction

Dystopia in Arabic Speculative Fiction
Title Dystopia in Arabic Speculative Fiction PDF eBook
Author Wessam Elmeligi
Publisher Taylor & Francis
Total Pages 169
Release 2023-08-29
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1000925382

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Dystopia in Arabic Speculative Fiction: A Poetics of Distress unpacks the nuanced Arabic contribution to speculative fiction. Part of a larger project by Elmeligi to formulate a poetics of literary theory to read Arabic literature, this book examines Arabic dystopian fiction from the lens of social causes of psychological distress. The selected novels combine works by authors already established in studies by Western scholars and many that have not been translated before or have not received enough scholarly attention, yet. The novels represent an array of Arab countries, including Algerian, Egyptian, Jordanian, Kuwaiti, Mauritanian, Syrian, and Tunisian authors. It also highlights the contribution of women authors to Arabic speculative fiction. This book enriches the conversation about what is quite possibly a significant speculative fiction turn in the Arabic novel, as well as provides a new theoretical approach to read such complex and innovative literature.

Food in Margaret Atwood’s Speculative Fiction

Food in Margaret Atwood’s Speculative Fiction
Title Food in Margaret Atwood’s Speculative Fiction PDF eBook
Author Katarina Labudova
Publisher Springer Nature
Total Pages 151
Release 2022-11-10
Genre Fiction
ISBN 3031191684

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This book looks at Margaret Atwood’s use of food motifs in speculative fiction. Focusing on six novels – The Handmaid’s Tale and The Testaments, the Maddaddam trilogy, and The Heart Goes Last – Katarina Labudova explores the environmental, ecological, and cultural questions at play and the possible future scenarios which emerge for humanity’s survival in apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic conditions. Labudova argues that food has special relevance in these novels and that characters’ hunger, limited food choices, culinary creativity and eating rituals are central to Atwood’s depictions of hostile environments. She also links food to hierarchy, dominance and oppression in Atwood’s novels, and foregrounds the problem of hunger, both psychological or physical, caused by pollution and loss of contact with the natural and authentic. The book shows how Atwood’s writing draws from a range of genres, including apocalyptic fiction, science fiction, speculative fiction, dystopia, utopia, fairy tale, myth, and thriller – and how food is an important, highly versatile motif linking these intertextual threads.