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The Rhetoric of Dystopia

Prophecies and Provocations in the Anthropocene

Christopher Carter

$180

Hardback

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English
Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
15 June 2024
The Rhetoric of Dystopia develops an idea of “emergent metalepsis” that describes the uncanny moments where fictive texts anticipate material events, blurring the boundary between the storyworld and the world of reception. Christopher Carter treats dystopia as rhetoric that shapes collective identities while speeding across platforms and geopolitical borders, at once critiquing and exemplifying the circulation of power relations through varied modes. This rhetoric features rampant viruses, authoritarian governments, corporate behemoths, corrupt educational and scientific institutions, and brutal policing, sometimes amplifying existing trends and sometimes merely documenting them. From Bong Joon-ho to Reed Morano, Octavia Butler to Richard McGuire, artists proffer arguments whose gravity we often fail to register, thus calling into question the uses of media literacy in an age of looming cataclysm. Carter situates this rhetoric within scholarship on literacy, built environments, border policies, global food production, and the Anthropocene.
By:  
Imprint:   Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
ISBN:   9781666941487
ISBN 10:   1666941484
Pages:   214
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Christopher Carter is professor of English at the University of Cincinnati.

Reviews for The Rhetoric of Dystopia: Prophecies and Provocations in the Anthropocene

The Rhetoric of Dystopia is a fascinating, path-breaking and insightful elaboration on literary and cinematic depictions of dystopian worlds and on the ambiguous politics of literacy and art. Its elegant prose and compelling argumentation make the book an engaging, thought-provoking and valuable analysis of aesthetic responses to pandemics, climatological and geopolitical ills, contrasts of abundance and deprivation, nuclear threat and environmental inequities. -- Marianna Papastephanou, Department of Education, University of Cyprus


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