EN 4241  Utopias and Dystopias

2007-08, Semester 2

Rajeev Patke  &  Susan Ang

 

 

Course Description and Objectives

 

The module examines the appeal of s/f as a serious fictional engagement with our consensual sense of reality. It addresses fantasy, speculative fiction, and science fiction as forms of narrative engaged in “world-building” and “word-shaping,” studying such fictional constructs as forms of sociological and anthropological knowledge. It also examines the relation between the “strange” and the “real” in terms of the shared and the antithetical elements that relate s/f to realism.

 

Primary Texts

  1. Anthony Burgess

 A Clockwork Orange (1962)
 2. Philip K. Dick

 Dr Bloodmoney (1965)

 3.  Ursula le Guin 

 The Dispossessed (1974)
 4. Margaret Atwood

 The Handmaid's Tale (1985)

 5. Sheri S. Tepper

 

 The Gate to Women's Country (1988)
 6. Kim Stanley Robinson

 Red Mars (1993)
 7. David Brin

 

 Glory Season (1993)

 

Assignments & Continuous assessment

 

The module has 100% CA.

1. Class-seminar and presentation (15%)

Note: Each student will do one presentation during the semester, of approximately 20 mins, and submit a handout or written version.

2. Class Test (35%)

Note: Open Book (primary texts only). The class test will be of 90 mins duration. The test format will be put up nearer the start of semester.

3. End-of-semester submission of Long Essay (30%)

Note: Length: Between 2,000-2,500 words (including references). To be submitted on the Monday of Week 12 of semester. 

4. End-of-semester Test (20%)

Note: The test will comprise short-answer quiz-type questions covering texts discussed in latter half of semester.

 

 

 

Links to web pages on topics and authors:

1. General issues concerning utopias and dystopias

2. Burgess: A Nadsat Dictionary

3. Burgess: notes and questions

4. Dick: seminar notes

5. le Guin: seminar notes

6. Atwood: seminar notes

7.  Tepper: seminar notes

8. Robinson: seminar notes

9. Brin: seminar notes

 

 

 

Suggested approaches to presentations & essays

 
(These are sample topics, to which more will be added throughout the semester.
For presentations & essays, you are encouraged to come up with similar topics of your own)
 
     Background topics/questions to keep in mind throughout the semester:
  • What are the ways in which sf narratives resemble "ordinary" realist fiction?
  • In what specific ways do sf narratives differ from realist narratives?
  • Why, when and how do writers turn and return to a utopian mode of thought about human life and societies?
  • Why, when and how does the utopian impulse turn or twist into dystopianism?
1. Single text topics
  • Burgess: What are the roles assigned to force, coercion, manipulation and deception in terms of human resource management in A Clockwork Orange
  • Dick: To what degree to do you think Dr Bloodmoney vindicates the authors claim that the people he invents show "strength and tenacity and vitality" (303)?
  • le Guin: In what sense is the factional politics represented in The Dispossessed a refraction of 20th century Cold War realities?
  • Atwood: What is the role assigned to Christianity by the novelist in her representation of Gilead in The Handmaid's Tale?
  • Robinson: What are the factors that contribute to the degeneration of utopianism on Mars in Red Mars?
  • Tepper: How do allusions to classical mythology reinforce the feminist impulse in The Gate to Women's Country?
  • Brin: What would you assess as the limitations of societies based on cloning as imagined in Glory Season?
 
2. Comparative topics (any two or three novels [of which one can be outside the syllabus] can be compared with a focus on the following perspectives:
  • The relation between utopian thinking and its inversion/negation/distortion/or what-have-you by the dystopian imagination in specific sf narratives.

  • The relation between the "speculative" element and the "(quasi-)science" element in utopian/dystopian fiction.

  • How technological developments affect human beings at the levels of the individual and of society.

  • The relation of the fictive conditions imagined by sf novels to the specific circumstances (historical, cultural, political, technological,  religious, etc) in which those narratives were written.

  • The role played by gender politics in the development of plot and character in utopian/dystopian narratives.

  • Contrast the role assigned to sexuality and gender roles in any 2 or 3 sf novels you've read for this module.

  • "One person's utopia may turn out to be another person's dystopia." Comment. 

  • Discuss the usefulness of the Foucaldian idea of "heterotopia" in relation to "utopia" and "dystopia". Link to e-copy of the Foucault essay.  

 

 

Lecture Schedule (AS5/0202) Mondays 1-3.50pm

Week

Starting

Text/Author/Topic

Lecturer

 Presentation schedule

1

14 Jan

 Introductory and Burgess

SA/RSP

 

2

21 Jan

 Burgess

RSP

 1  Burgess

3

28 Jan  Dick

SA

2  Dick

4

4 Feb  Dick and le Guin RSP 3  le Guin

5

11 Feb  le Guin

SA

4  Comparative topics

6

18 Feb  Atwood SA 5  Atwood

 

23 Feb

RECESS WEEK

7

3 Mar  Atwood and Tepper RSP 6  Comparative topics

8

10 Mar  Tepper

SA

7  Tepper

9

17 Mar    CLASS TEST RSP    Robinson

10

24 Mar  Robinson

RSP

8  Comparative topics

11

31 Mar  Robinson/Brin SA 9  Brin

12

7 Apr  Brin   ESSAY DUE

RSP

10  Comparative topics

13

14 Apr  Comparative and concluding discussion

SA/RSP

   

 

Supplementary Reading

  

REFERENCE WORK 

J. Clute & P. Nicholls (ed), The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (1993) 

CRITICAL WORKS 

Fredric Jameson, Archaeologies of the future: the desire called utopia and other science fictions (2005)

Richard Gerber, Utopian Fantasy 1973) 

Alexandra Aldridge, The Scientific World View in Dystopia (1984) 

Ursula le Guin, The Language of the Night (1979) 

Ursula le Guin, Dancing at the Edge of the World (1989)

Tom Moylan, Demand the Impossible: Science Fiction and the Utopian Imagination (1984) 

Brian Stableford, The Sociology of Science Fiction (1987) 

Frances Bartowski, Feminist Utopias (1989) 

Scott Bukatman, Terminal Identity: The Virtual Subject in Postmodern Science Fiction (1993) Jenny Wolmark, Aliens and Others: Science Fiction, Feminism and Postmodernism (1994) 

Neil Barron, Anatomy of Wonder 4 (4th edn., 1995) 

Damien Broderick, Reading by Starlight: Postmodern Science Fiction (1995) 

Brooks Landon, Science Fiction After 1900 (1997) 

JOURNALS

Science-Fiction Studies 

Extrapolation

Foundation: The Review of Science Fiction

 

 

LINKS

 

 ISF Database

 SF Bibliographies

http://sflovers.rutgers.edu/bibliographies/authorlists/

http://access-co2.tamu.edu/hhall/

http://www.wsu.edu/~brians/science_fiction/sfresearch.html

http://www.uiowa.edu/~sfs/biblio.htm

The SF Site

 VOS S/F Page

 SF Awards

 Feminist S/F Site

ANTHONY BURGESS

Bryce Utting's Notes

A critical look at A Clockwork Orange

Nadsat dictionary

Stanley Kubrick (1971) movie

Kubrick film: another site

 PHILIP K. DICK

  Philip K. Dick Website

  Another P.K. Dick site

Another P.K. Dick site

Another P.K. Dick site

Another P.K. Dick site: Interviews

 

 

 HOME

 

Last Updated  April 2, 2008