In honor of the thirtieth anniversary of The Handmaid’s Tale: Margaret Atwood describes how she came to write her utopian, dystopian works. The word “utopia” comes from Thomas More’s book of the same name—meaning “no place” or “good place,” or both. In “Dire Cartographies,” from the essay collection In Other Worlds, Atwood coins the term “ustopia,” which combines utopia and dystopia, the imagined perfect society and its opposite. Each contains latent versions of the other. Following her intellectual journey and growing familiarity with ustopias fictional and real, from Atlantis to Avatar and Beowulf to Berlin in 1984 (and 1984), Atwood explains how years after abandoning a PhD thesis with chapters on good and bad societies, she produced novel-length dystopias and ustopias of her own. “My rules for The Handmaid’s Tale were simple,” Atwood writes. “I would not put into this book anything that humankind had not already done, somewhere, sometime, or for which it did not already have the tools.” With great wit and erudition, Atwood reveals the history behind her beloved creations.
This book examines the recent popularity of the dystopian genre in literature and film, as well as connecting contemporary manifestations of dystopia to cultural trends and the implications of technological and social changes on the ...
... Dire Cartographies: The Roads to Ustopia: The Handmaid's Tale and the MaddAddam Trilogy' in In Other Worlds. That paper explores the concept later. 3 The term 'deterritorialization' often accompanied by 'reterritorialization' refers to ...
Maybe we can be born again, this time out of an artificial head instead of a natural body, and download the contents of our brains into machines, and linger around in cyberspace, as in William Gibson's novels.
... Dire Cartographies: the Roads to Ustopia,” in In Other Worlds: SF and the Human Imagination (New York: Random House Inc., 2011), 66. 61 Atwood, “Dire Cartographies,” 92. As Svec and Winiski summarise the dispute: “Margaret Atwood saw 62 ...
... Encyclopedia of British Writers, 1800 to the Present, Third Edition. Facts On File, 2013. Bloom's Literature, online.infobase.com/HRC/Search/Details /31702?q=h g wells. Accessed 29 Jan. 2018. King James Bible Online. Web. 27 Dec 2014 ...
... Dire Cartographies: The Roads to Utopia”, she outlines the relationship between dystopia and utopia as a “yin and ... cartography of dystopia. She supposes that ustopia is a state of mind that can be depicted by a landscape. Her ustopias ...
This collection of essays explores the richness of work as a linguistic, cultural, and historical concept and the conjunctures that are changing work and its worlds.
Greg Clinton. Mythic. Places. In a chapter called “Dire Cartographies” from her book In Other Worlds: Science Fiction and the Human Imagination, renowned novelist Margaret Atwood argues that the imagination of otherness, of what is ...
Utopia and Dystopia in the Age of Trump focuses on utopias and dystopias that either prefigure or suggest alternatives to the rise of individuals such as Donald J. Trump and the changing conditions of America we now see around us.
... the Light Brigade,” Ted Hughes's “Bayonet Charge,” Margaret Postgate Cole's “The Falling Leaves,” Stevie Smith's “Come On, Come Back,” E. E. Cummings's “next to of course god america i” and another poem by Hughes – “Hawk Roosting.