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Showing papers by "Sandra M. Gilbert published in 1997"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors admit that they tend to be enthralled by "futurology", which is defined as the not very scientific science of the ways in which what will be may evolve out of what has been.
Abstract: ECAUSE I am sometimes as eagerly confessional as I am incurably epigraphic, I must begin by admitting that I tend to be enthralled by "futurology," which I suppose might be defined as the not very scientific science of the ways in which what will be may evolve out of what has been. And though, I hardly need note, this tag end of the 1990s is an especially juicy time for us futurologists, poets and their readers have been approaching the second millennium for over a century, as my three epigraphs emphasize. No matter how you figure it-as a mysterious futurity casting its gigantic shadows upon the literary imagination, as a new day dawning, or as a sun setting over the evening

1 citations