Further Reflections on Being a Utopian in These Times
Author(s) -
Tom Moylan
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
open library of humanities
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2056-6700
DOI - 10.16995/olh.264
Subject(s) - dystopia , utopia , ideology , context (archaeology) , sociology , aesthetics , appropriation , counterpoint , epistemology , argument (complex analysis) , philosophy , art history , politics , literature , law , history , art , political science , pedagogy , biochemistry , chemistry , archaeology
In this essay (a revision of my contribution at the closing session of the Imaginaries of the Future Leverhulme Network held in London in September 2017), I offer a situated commentary (by ‘me’) on ‘ourselves’ (and I know that category has to be deconstructed, complicated, exploded, erased, and yet retained) as utopians and on the work ‘we’ do, and can do (for this was a utopian conference). I begin with a reflection on the current mobilization of the term dystopia as a signifier for our times, and as I do so I offer a counterpoint to the ideological appropriation of dystopia by way of my own argument in Scraps of the Untainted Sky (Westview 2000) for the militant pessimism of the critical dystopia. I then comment on several interrelated matters: the role of the utopian as scholar and as intellectual; the context and import of our work, in the academy and in the world; the utopian problematic (in its inclusion of the utopian object of study and utopia as method); and the necessity, indeed urgency, of ‘our’ work in these critical times. My aim is tease out the utopian surplus within the utopian formation.
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