Images of decay, both psychological and physical, permeate much of J.G. Ballard’s fiction, creating in effect a unique aesthetic that has acquired the eponymous description “ballardian.” This imagery, stemming from the surrealist tradition, is more than aesthetic affectation; it is, as this article argues, the manifestation of an eschatological theme underlying much of New Wave science fiction. This article also addresses how scientific discourse, especially references to entropy, and surrealist aesthetics intersect in his novels (High-Rise and The Drowned World) to provide a metaphor for Ballard’s frequent use of decay imagery. Though the surrealist component of his imagination has been well documented, what still invites closer scrutiny a...
This paper investigates J.G. Ballard's vision of the house, tracing its origin to the ideas expresse...
This article examines the relationship between the actual and fictional archive and science fiction....
Over the last twenty years James Graham Ballard (1930-2009) has been definitively included in the of...
This paper offers a discussion of J. G. Ballard’s first four novels, The Wind From Nowhere (19...
Making the case that J. G. Ballard's fictional and non-fictional writings must be read within the fr...
The paper explores the development of the utopian and dystopian literature in the experimental and p...
In this thesis, I classify J.G. Ballard's major novels into three categories according to theme, per...
J. G. Ballard prompted a turn in dystopian literature from political/social issues to environmental ...
In this thesis, J. G. Ballard’s science fiction novels The Wind from Nowhere (1961), The Drowned Wo...
This article pursues a non-green reading of The Crystal World (1966) that explores Ballard’s links w...
This article explores the way in which surrealist techniques and assumptions underpin spatial repres...
xxxThe fiction of J. G. Ballard is unusually concerned with spaces, both internal and exterior. Infl...
J. G. Ballard was one of the most original writers of the postwar era. Although he has drawn conside...
In a 1962 manifesto published in New Worlds called ‘Which Way to Inner Space?’ Ballard wrote: ‘The b...
“The Daemonology of Unplumbed Space: Weird Fiction, Disgust, and the Aesthetics of the Unthinkable” ...
This paper investigates J.G. Ballard's vision of the house, tracing its origin to the ideas expresse...
This article examines the relationship between the actual and fictional archive and science fiction....
Over the last twenty years James Graham Ballard (1930-2009) has been definitively included in the of...
This paper offers a discussion of J. G. Ballard’s first four novels, The Wind From Nowhere (19...
Making the case that J. G. Ballard's fictional and non-fictional writings must be read within the fr...
The paper explores the development of the utopian and dystopian literature in the experimental and p...
In this thesis, I classify J.G. Ballard's major novels into three categories according to theme, per...
J. G. Ballard prompted a turn in dystopian literature from political/social issues to environmental ...
In this thesis, J. G. Ballard’s science fiction novels The Wind from Nowhere (1961), The Drowned Wo...
This article pursues a non-green reading of The Crystal World (1966) that explores Ballard’s links w...
This article explores the way in which surrealist techniques and assumptions underpin spatial repres...
xxxThe fiction of J. G. Ballard is unusually concerned with spaces, both internal and exterior. Infl...
J. G. Ballard was one of the most original writers of the postwar era. Although he has drawn conside...
In a 1962 manifesto published in New Worlds called ‘Which Way to Inner Space?’ Ballard wrote: ‘The b...
“The Daemonology of Unplumbed Space: Weird Fiction, Disgust, and the Aesthetics of the Unthinkable” ...
This paper investigates J.G. Ballard's vision of the house, tracing its origin to the ideas expresse...
This article examines the relationship between the actual and fictional archive and science fiction....
Over the last twenty years James Graham Ballard (1930-2009) has been definitively included in the of...