The Problem with Utopias
The history of utopian fiction proves that we can’t even imagine a better world.
A collection of 21 posts
The history of utopian fiction proves that we can’t even imagine a better world.
The themes of Liu Cixin’s trilogy undermine his protestations of loyalty to the People’s Republic.
1900–1950 was a golden age of literary eccentricity.
“It’s a sin to want to die for a nation.”
If truth is the first casualty of war, then perhaps good fiction is the first casualty of culture war.
Fiction writers are used to working in lonely isolation. Maybe that’s why the stories they’ve written about the pandemic seem so out of touch
And it turns out that she was, because despite the best efforts of her critics, she hasn’t yet been truly cancelled.
If you haven’t seen Endgame yet—or if you take comfort in the delusion that Marvel is “woke”—stop reading now.
Nineteen-Eighty Four, whose first publication took place 70 years ago today, is itself a sort of anti-novel, one that undermines its own dramatic tension in a way that might now be described as postmodern.
An even moderately careful reading of Lolita should make it quite clear that it’s anything but a “celebration” of child rape.
If sensitivity readers become a publishing institution, they will only incentivize more cautious, conservative, and ideologically homogenous books.
Houellebecq depicts a Europe where French culture is a bad joke.
No Young Adult fiction writer is in danger of being shot, starved, or sent to work in the mines for political transgressions.