Fears of mass culture generating visions of rule not by fear, but by the narcotics of conformity and abolition of privacy, in the fiction of Huxley and Eggers—‘total sociability’ resistable only by figures of the doomed individual. The fading even of high culture as notional refuge in the passage beyond the Brave New World
This thesis carefully considers the presence of neoliberal individualism in contemporary dystopian f...
Although transhumanism counts with the support of a growing number of followers, some critics and wr...
This article examines literary stagings of the relationship between the individual and the mass in ...
Fears of mass culture generating visions of rule not by fear, but by the narcotics of conformity and...
Aldous Huxley\u27s Brave New World, George Orwell\u27s Nineteen Eighty-Four, and Anthony Burgess\u27...
From its inception in Plato’s Republic and revival in Thomas More’s Utopia, the concept of a pe...
The dystopian genre in literature is not a happy genre. We are not drawn to works of dystopian ficti...
Utopia is a word coined by Thomas More and it signifies a perfect imaginary society. John Stuart Mil...
According to Fredric Jameson (2016: 1), “we have seen a marked diminution in the production of new ...
At the turn of the new millennium, the fiction published by the new generation of writersof the New S...
How do the dystopian attitudes of Adolus Huxley in ‘Brave New World’and Ray Bradbury in ‘Fahrenheit ...
Contemporary young adult novels that focus on dystopian societies often depict places where individu...
Dystopian literature characteristically addresses the plight of the “everyman” as he copes with the ...
Over the past few years, “dystopia” has become a word with increasing cultural currency. This volume...
The aim of this Extended Essay is to explore the portrayal and creation of dystopias accepting techn...
This thesis carefully considers the presence of neoliberal individualism in contemporary dystopian f...
Although transhumanism counts with the support of a growing number of followers, some critics and wr...
This article examines literary stagings of the relationship between the individual and the mass in ...
Fears of mass culture generating visions of rule not by fear, but by the narcotics of conformity and...
Aldous Huxley\u27s Brave New World, George Orwell\u27s Nineteen Eighty-Four, and Anthony Burgess\u27...
From its inception in Plato’s Republic and revival in Thomas More’s Utopia, the concept of a pe...
The dystopian genre in literature is not a happy genre. We are not drawn to works of dystopian ficti...
Utopia is a word coined by Thomas More and it signifies a perfect imaginary society. John Stuart Mil...
According to Fredric Jameson (2016: 1), “we have seen a marked diminution in the production of new ...
At the turn of the new millennium, the fiction published by the new generation of writersof the New S...
How do the dystopian attitudes of Adolus Huxley in ‘Brave New World’and Ray Bradbury in ‘Fahrenheit ...
Contemporary young adult novels that focus on dystopian societies often depict places where individu...
Dystopian literature characteristically addresses the plight of the “everyman” as he copes with the ...
Over the past few years, “dystopia” has become a word with increasing cultural currency. This volume...
The aim of this Extended Essay is to explore the portrayal and creation of dystopias accepting techn...
This thesis carefully considers the presence of neoliberal individualism in contemporary dystopian f...
Although transhumanism counts with the support of a growing number of followers, some critics and wr...
This article examines literary stagings of the relationship between the individual and the mass in ...