David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas is a novel intent on blasting open the classical unities of time and place. On publication in 2004, its unusual structure made it a talking-point for reviewers and readers alike. It was an unexpected crossover hit, winning critical acclaim and also finding popular appeal. For a novel with clear global ambitions, the decision to begin and end in the often overlooked and liminal region of the Pacific Islands, rather than in the culturally and economically more dominant spheres of Europe, America or Asia, is no accident. In this essay, I suggest that Mitchell’s novel can be read as a (re)staging of the perennial conflict between Hobbesian and Rousseauian conceptions of nature and humanity’s place within it. I will ...
The unprecedented spread of globalization has led to thematic developments in contemporary British ...
International audienceThe outcome of the first international conference on David Mitchell's writing,...
This essay explores the trope of reincarnation across the works of British author David Mitchell (b....
Drawing on world-systems analytic perspectives and development studies, this article argues for the ...
This paper explores the representation of cannibalism in David Mitchell’s novel, Cloud Atlas, and d...
The tradition of global disasters in literature is long-standing and David Mitchell contributes to t...
My paper focuses on the representation of cannibalism in David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas, the tension b...
International audienceIn two of his novels, Cloud Atlas (2006) and The Bone Clocks (2014) British au...
This article considers the anthropocentric construction of the human subject in Defoe’s novel Robins...
This essay marks the degrading biosphere in David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas and argues that its narrati...
Through six different narratives, David Mitchell in his novel, Cloud Atlas, introduces a world where...
David Mitchell’s The Bone Clocks (2014) seemingly echoes the historical struggles of Cloud Atlas (20...
International audienceScience fiction literature can be a language laboratory: the same way science ...
Today, world literature is seen as a mode of reading and ‘problem’ that demands new critical method...
A cosmodern reading of David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas creates a positive vision of the longer term for...
The unprecedented spread of globalization has led to thematic developments in contemporary British ...
International audienceThe outcome of the first international conference on David Mitchell's writing,...
This essay explores the trope of reincarnation across the works of British author David Mitchell (b....
Drawing on world-systems analytic perspectives and development studies, this article argues for the ...
This paper explores the representation of cannibalism in David Mitchell’s novel, Cloud Atlas, and d...
The tradition of global disasters in literature is long-standing and David Mitchell contributes to t...
My paper focuses on the representation of cannibalism in David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas, the tension b...
International audienceIn two of his novels, Cloud Atlas (2006) and The Bone Clocks (2014) British au...
This article considers the anthropocentric construction of the human subject in Defoe’s novel Robins...
This essay marks the degrading biosphere in David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas and argues that its narrati...
Through six different narratives, David Mitchell in his novel, Cloud Atlas, introduces a world where...
David Mitchell’s The Bone Clocks (2014) seemingly echoes the historical struggles of Cloud Atlas (20...
International audienceScience fiction literature can be a language laboratory: the same way science ...
Today, world literature is seen as a mode of reading and ‘problem’ that demands new critical method...
A cosmodern reading of David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas creates a positive vision of the longer term for...
The unprecedented spread of globalization has led to thematic developments in contemporary British ...
International audienceThe outcome of the first international conference on David Mitchell's writing,...
This essay explores the trope of reincarnation across the works of British author David Mitchell (b....