"The Old Stories Had Become Our Prison": Globalisation and Identity Politics in John Barnes's Science Fiction Novels A Million Open Doors and Earth Made of Glass
release_myleay6p4fgohpakhz3kkqvdey
by
Michael Godhe
2018
Abstract
The article discusses how issues raised by globalisation are represented in John Barnes's novels A Million Open Doors (1992) and Earth Made of Glass (1998). I will argue that science fiction can work as a model for a futural public sphere, bridging the gap between the humanities and natural science, and enabling a broader public discourse about the societal impacts of science and technology.
Through the novels' protagonists, Barnes discusses matters of authenticity and identity politics triggered by the globalisation discourse of the 1990s – issues that have again been brought to the fore in the political sphere. By setting the stories in our galaxy in the 29th century, Barnes is debating, challenging, and contesting dystopian as well as utopian conceptions of globalisation in our time. Barnes's novels highlight the implications of nationalist ideologies, identity politics, and notions of authenticity.
But Barnes also shows how utopian thinking on a borderless global world and idyllic visions of a post-national society (expressed in some of the more utopian streams of globalization literature) are undermined by identity politics. In this sense, Barnes's novels are opening up a terrain for debating these issues, forming a basis for a futural public sphere.
In text/plain
format
Archived Files and Locations
application/pdf
335.5 kB
file_5csku3spifganh7pljzvmts7sy
|
journal.finfar.org (publisher) web.archive.org (webarchive) |
Open Access Publication
In DOAJ
In ISSN ROAD
Not in Keepers Registry
ISSN-L:
2342-2009
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)