Philip K. Dick: Exhilaration and Terror of the PostmodernOnce the sole possession of fans and buffs, the SF author Philip K Dick is now finding a much wider audience, as the success of the films Blade Runner and Minority Report shows. The kind of world he predicted in his funny and frightening novels and stories is coming closer to most of us: shifting realities, unstable relations, uncertain moralities. Philip K Dick: Exhilaration and Terror of the Postmodern examines a wide range of Dick's work, including his short stories and posthumously published realist novels. Christopher Palmer analyses the puzzling and dazzling effects of Dick's fiction, and argues that at its heart is a clash between exhilarating possibilities of transformation, and a frightening lack of ethical certainties. Dick's work is seen as the inscription of his own historical predicament, the clash between humanism and postmodernism being played out in the complex forms of the fiction. The problem is never resolved, but Dick's ways of imagining it become steadily more ingenious and chal |
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Page 48
... deity we deserve , the deity that is a grotesque inflation of our vices and even pet- tinesses . Dick's obsession with deities as fathers , and with fathers or authority figures as deities , his meditations on nuclear apocalypse and his ...
... deity we deserve , the deity that is a grotesque inflation of our vices and even pet- tinesses . Dick's obsession with deities as fathers , and with fathers or authority figures as deities , his meditations on nuclear apocalypse and his ...
Page 134
... deity eats or consumes humans , in an inversion of the eucharist . This discussion will complement the picture of the phenomenological shape of Dick's megatext that was offered in Chapter 3 , and extend the discussion of his sense of ...
... deity eats or consumes humans , in an inversion of the eucharist . This discussion will complement the picture of the phenomenological shape of Dick's megatext that was offered in Chapter 3 , and extend the discussion of his sense of ...
Page 140
... deities . 2. Dangers of the Deity In the course of Ubik ( 1969 ) , Joe Chip and his friends gradually discover why things in their world are failing , regressing and fading , and why they themselves are horribly withering and expiring ...
... deities . 2. Dangers of the Deity In the course of Ubik ( 1969 ) , Joe Chip and his friends gradually discover why things in their world are failing , regressing and fading , and why they themselves are horribly withering and expiring ...
Contents
Philip K Dick and the Postmodern | 3 |
Complications of Humanism and Postmodernism | 30 |
Static and Kinetic in Dicks Political Unconscious | 44 |
Copyright | |
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Philip K. Dick: Exhilaration and Terror of the Postmodern Christopher Palmer No preview available - 2003 |
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