Spring 2024 English GU4316 section 001

WORLD'S END: 20th/21st CENTURY DYSTOPIAN

WORLD'S END

Call Number 12356
Day & Time
Location
MW 2:40pm-3:55pm
209 Havemeyer Hall
Points 3
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Jack Halberstam
Type LECTURE
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

No future, there’s no future, no future for you…or me…What happens after the end of the future? If England’s dreaming in 1977 looked like a dead-end, how do we dream of futures in a moment so much closer to the reality of worlds’ end? In this class, we will read a range of ambiguous utopias and dystopias (to use a term from Ursula LeGuin) and explore various models of temporality, a range of fantasies of apocalypse and a few visions of futurity. While some critics, like Frederick Jameson, propose that utopia is a “meditation on the impossible,” others like José Muñoz insist that “we must dream and enact new and better pleasures, other ways of being in the world, and ultimately new worlds.” Utopian and dystopian fictions tend to lead us back to the present and force confrontations with the horrors of war, the ravages of capitalist exploitation, the violence of social hierarchies and the ruinous peril of environmental decline. In the films and novels and essays we engage here, we will not be looking for answers to questions about what to do and nor should we expect to find maps to better futures. We will no doubt be confronted with dead ends, blasted landscapes and empty gestures. But we will also find elegant aesthetic expressions of ruination, inspirational confrontations with obliteration, brilliant visions of endings, breaches, bureaucratic domination, human limitation and necro-political chaos. We will search in the narratives of uprisings, zombification, cloning, nuclear disaster, refusal, solidarity, for opportunities to reimagine world, ends, futures, time, place, person, possibility, art, desire, bodies, life and death.

Web Site Vergil
Department English and Comparative Literature
Enrollment 41 students (60 max) as of 4:05PM Saturday, December 21, 2024
Subject English
Number GU4316
Section 001
Division Interfaculty
Section key 20241ENGL4316W001