"Dystopia is alive and well in contemporary American society, and not least of all on the small screen. Long studied as a mass means of shrouding the headlines and the nightly news in affect in order to render intelligible an increasingly chaotic and terrifying world (removing any potential for panic or revolutionary action) television has certainly not lacked for material of late, furnishing allegorical retellings of events from the paranoid, corporatized world created by 9/11, the 2008 economic collapse, 2016 election and other traumatic events. These pessimistic dystopian tales, however, are not the full story. More and more frequently, these television shows also attempt to visualize an alternative world - one in which the pressures of dystopia create an imperative for change. Programming the Future takes a close look at this phenomenon and provides close studies of some of its prime examples. Grounding their analysis in Ernst Bloch's conceptualization of the role of utopia as either abstract (and diversionary) or concrete (and revolutionary), Vint and Alexander explore the long-form SF narrative's emerging role as a generative space of political imagination about the future. Examples include "alien" invasion narratives such as Threshold and Falling Skies, which endorse a jingoistic/nationalistic response to post-9/11 fears of invaders of various stripes; The Man in the High Castle, as a fully-formed, alternate "fake America," that eerily resembles reality despite positing a Nazi victory in WWII; and the hopelessness in the face of corporate power evoked by Mr. Robot, in which the fall of an evil corporation only results in greater suffering for ordinary people"--
Author(s): Sherryl Vint; Jonathan Alexander
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 255
City: New York
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. The Changing Shape of Science Fiction Television
2. Inventing Science Fiction Television as Political Narrative
3. 9/11 and Its Aftermaths: Threats of Invasion
4. American Civil Wars
5. Desiring a Different Future: The 100 and The Expanse
6. Rebooting Democracy and Mr. Robot
Conclusion: Democracy in Crisis
Notes
Bibliography
Filmography
Index