Caietele Echinox (Jun 2024)

Paranoid Imaginaries and Megatextual Utopianism

  • Alexander Popov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.24193/cechinox.2024.46.26
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 46
pp. 349 – 364

Abstract

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The article explores the hypothesis that Utopian and Paranoid SF, both of which produced some of their most influential texts in the 1970s, co-evolved under structurally similar pressures and developed analogous conceptual instruments to engage with the question of totality. It proposes a theoretical model that situates the two subgenres in a network of conceptual positions regarding fundamental categories such as space, time and subjectivity. The model is then applied in readings of key novels of Paranoid SF: Robert Shea and Robert Wilson’s Illuminatus! Trilogy, Philip Dick’s Ubik, A Scanner Darkly and VALIS, and Thomas Pynchon’s Gravity’s Rainbow.

Keywords