English 366:  Science Fiction

Utopian and Dystopia

Syllabus

Syllabus Spring 2009



Exams
TBA

Handouts

Key Concepts for the Study of Utopian Fiction

Key Concepts for the Study of Dystopian Fiction

Feminist SF: Bibliography of Select Criticism

Optopian Design of Whileaway

Jameson: World Reduction in Le Guin [essay on The Left Hand of Darkness]

The Critics and The Dispossessed

Le Guin: Left Hand of Darkness

The Critics and Trouble on Triton

Delany Triton Bibliography

"Mars Trilogy" summaries

Spring 09 Critical Essay Asg

Bourdieu Chart:  Symbolic Space and Social Space

Web Links

SF and Fantasy Research database [excellent resource]

Sci-Fi.Com

Science Fiction Studies (journal)

Utopian Society (excellent resource; many links)

Utopian Links

Feminist SF, Utopia, and Fantasy

The Dispossessed:  A Study Guide

The SF Site:  The Best in Science Fiction and Fantasy

Science Fiction Weekly

Alpha Ralpha Boulevard:  Sci-fi and Fantasy Bibliographies

Science Fiction Research Bibliography (excellent)

Interview with Le Guin

Even more sci-fi links!

Marxist Internet Archive

Miscellaneous
Evolution of Capitalism and the Arts

Baudrillard: Simulacra and Science Fiction


Essay guidelines

 

“Yet utopia as a form is not the representation of radical alternatives; it is rather simply the imperative to imagine them.”
                  Fredric Jameson, “’If I find one city, I will spare the man’:  Realism and Utopia in Kim Stanley Robinson’s Mars Trilogy.”

" . . . the ideal of Utopian living involves the imagination in a contradictory project, since they all presumably aim at illustrating and exercising that much-abused concept of freedom that virtually by definition and in its very structure, cannot be defined in advance, let alone exemplified."
                 
Fredric Jameson, The Seeds of Time

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Dystopian short stories, on-line:

Le Guin: “The Ones who walk away from Omelas”

 Paolo Bacigalupi. "The Fluted Girl"


Spring 2009 class members:
  Please read this on-line essay in preparation for the final exam:  "The Politics of Utopia," by Fredric Jameson:  http://www.newleftreview.net/Issue25.asp?Article=02

The following quotations are especially important: 

1)  Utopia's "function lies not in helping us to imagine a better future but rather in demonstrating our utter incapacity to imagine such a future—our imprisonment in a non-utopian present without historicity or futurity—so as to reveal the ideological closure of the system in which we are somehow trapped and confined."

2)  "No matter how comprehensive and trans-class or post-ideological the inventory of reality’s flaws and defects, the imagined resolution necessarily remains wedded to this or that ideological perspective."

3)  "Utopias in fact come to us as barely audible messages from a future that may never come into being."