愿景
叙述的
反问句
预测(人工智能)
历史
包裹体(矿物)
模式(计算机接口)
文明
美学
文学类
环境伦理学
政治学
社会学
艺术
哲学
社会科学
人类学
计算机科学
考古
操作系统
人工智能
出处
期刊:Narrative
[Ohio State University Press]
日期:2021-01-01
卷期号:29 (3): 355-373
被引量:6
标识
DOI:10.1353/nar.2021.0022
摘要
In our future-oriented era, future visions have become increasingly important for shaping policy and public awareness. How is fictionality as a rhetorical mode used in non-literary future visions, and how are signposts of fiction instrumental—or detrimental—to conveying pathways to the future, in view of forecasted environmental devastation and radical climate change? How does the temporal mode of the scenario (which, describing the future, has as yet has no truth-value in the actual world) complicate our thinking of fictionality? This article examines fictionality in a selection of non-literary narratives of future catastrophe: The Effects of Nuclear War (1979), Storms of My Grandchildren (2009), The End of Western Civilization (2014), and The Water Will Come (2017). I develop the idea of "fraught fictionality" to denote the kind of uneasy fictionality found in future scenarios, burdened by its inclusion within a textual genre that is geared toward policy-making and anticipation.
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