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Urban Spaces in Dystopian Science Fiction

Daniel Ferreras Savoye
- Vol. 3, Iss: 2, pp 133-149
TLDR
The analysis of the urban paradigm allows us to distinguish the genre of dystopian science fiction from neighboring, openly anti-realistic genres, such as the Fantastic, the Marvelous and space opera as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
The analysis of the urban paradigm allows us to distinguish the genre of dystopian science fiction from neighboring, openly anti-realistic genres, such as the Fantastic, the Marvelous and space opera. The city, as an explicit and perverted manifestation of post-enlightened ideals—progress, common wealth, pragmatism and ultimately, materialism—semiotically complements the epistemological doubt put forward by dystopian science fiction, which, unlike that expressed by the Fantastic, is based upon the predictable rather than the unpredictable. When it comes to the narrative function of the urban space within the universe of dystopian science fiction, Phillip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? and William Gibson’s Neuromancer constitute a highly representative corpus, for both works, each corresponding to a very specific and important moment in the evolution of the genre, incorporate the city as a determining factor within

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アンドロイドは電気羊の夢を見るか? : Do androids dream of electric sheep?

TL;DR: A TURTLE WHICH EXPLORER CAPTAIN COOK GAVE TO THE KING OF TONGA IN 1777 DIED YESTERDAY. It was NEARLY 200 YEARS OLD as mentioned in this paper.
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The romantic fantastic

Tobin Siebers
Book ChapterDOI

Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft

TL;DR: The Roman Frankenstein (1818/31, dt. 1912) is one of the bekanntesten texten der englischen Romantik as discussed by the authors, in der Schreiben und Veroffentlichen auch fur Frauen als normal galten.
Book

The Colour Out of Space

TL;DR: In the wild west of America, the hills rise wild, and there are valleys with deep woods that no axe has ever cut as mentioned in this paper, where the trees slope fantastically, and where thin brooklets trickle without ever having caught the glint of sunlight.