Lexington Books
Pages: 214
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-66694-148-7 • Hardback • August 2024 • $105.00 • (£81.00)
978-1-66694-149-4 • eBook • June 2024 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Christopher Carter is professor of English at the University of Cincinnati.
Chapter One: Dystopian Literacies: Writing in Worlds Gone Wrong
Chapter Two: Roquentin’s Nightmare: Fantastic Spaces and Failed Individuation
Chapter Three: Limit Cases: Youth on the Border
Chapter Four: Eating Our Own Crimes: Food Horror in the Anthropocene
Chapter Five: Out of Time: Kairos and the Post-Apocalypse
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
Carter offers a deeply compelling analysis of the dystopian aesthetic in cultural production, reading the films and novels of crisis and collapse not as the despairing lamentations they might seem, but as vital reminders that a better world is possible.
— James R. Daniel, Seton Hall University