We invite papers on the role of nostalgia as a structure of feeling that
animates speculative, utopian, and (post)apocalyptic texts across media.
Although there has been increasing critical attention to the role of memory in
these genres, nostalgia is a neglected topic. We seek papers that explore
nostalgia as affect and motif in the genre, following Jameson’s description of
sf as a mode of “apprehending the future as history” (1982), while discussing
seemingly future-oriented texts such William Gibson’s Neuromancer (1984) and
Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner (1982). Nostalgia had already been consolidated
within mainstream popular culture via George Lucas’s Star Wars (1977) which
self-consciously harkened back to earlier eras, texts and subgenres, from the
space operas of E.E. Doc Smith to the film serials of the 1930s, from Fred Wilcox’s Forbidden Planet (1956) to Frank Herbert’s Dune (1965). In contemporary
media, Star Wars itself is now one among many rebooted titles, as mainstream
science fiction reanimates its own popular history. As Judith Berman argues in
“Science Fiction without the Future” (2001), even the stories of Golden Age
pulp sf were less about the future than “full of nostalgia, regret, fear of
aging and death.” The genre has frequently been preoccupied with the past as it
imagines the future even in cinema, evident in films such as Code 46 (Winterbottom 2003) and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (Gondry 2004)
which are driven by almost futile search for the lost object.
Further connections may be detected between nostalgia and genres such as
utopia and dystopia. If utopianism produces future-orientated discourses that
seek to transform the present into an idealised future, nostalgia might be
described as inverted utopianism that generates an ameliorated, utopianized
recollection of the past, as is evident in nineteenth-century utopias, such
William Morris’s News from Nowhere (1890) whose post-apocalyptic future
betrays a yearning for a pre-industrial, pastoral era. In The Future of
Nostalgia (2001) Svetlana Boym contends that nostalgia can function as a critical
form of remembering that is not bound to a single version of the past, enabling
texts to revisit the past to animate different realities and futures, a
technique central to works such as Joanna Russ’s The Female Man (1974) and
Marge Piercy’s Woman on the Edge of Time (1974). Classical dystopias, on the
other hand, such as Eugene Zamyatin’s We (1920-21) and George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four (1948) often look to the past as a time of more
authentic existence, a motif that continues in recent television series such as The Walking Dead (2010-) and The Handmaid’s Tale (2017-), especially in
their use of flashback sequences.
Most recently, we have seen widescale interest in sf that nostalgically
engages with the 1980s, often through allusions to sf of that era. Netflix has
been a major agent in this trend, exemplified by the phenomenal success of Stranger Things (2016-), whose 1980s setting is also contemporary with
Jameson’s theorization of sf and history. Other Netflix projects indicate an
ongoing interest in nostalgia and this particular decade, such as the German
series Dark (2017-), which uses time travel and alternative histories to
evoke the 1980s as a consequential turning point in history, or the “San
Junipero” episode of Black Mirror (2011-), whose recreation of the 1980s in
an online virtual afterlife is often described as the only optimistic episode
of the series. This recent cycle of sf might be thought of as second-order
nostalgia, that is, texts that encourage young audiences to feel nostalgia
about a period they did not live through, one they experienced only via media
made at this time. Drawing on Marianne Hirsch’s theorization of “post-memory,”
we suggest the term “post-nostalgia” as a way to conceptualize the affective
and thematic preoccupations of such work.
We invite submissions that explore these complex intersections of
nostalgia and sf. We are interested in papers that revisit the dominant
perception of nostalgia as a conservative affective response to a contemporary
sense of crisis, and we especially welcome those that explore reflective,
critical, or transformative examples of nostalgia that enables a dialectic
relationship to the past. We encourage papers that explore how and why
nostalgia has resurfaced in genres of the speculative at this particular
historical moment. We welcome submissions that explore science fiction in any
medium.
Indicative yet not exhaustive possible topics include:
- sf, nostalgia and cognitive estrangement
- sf, nostalgia and temporality
- sf, nostalgia and media archaeology
- nostalgia, utopia, dystopia
- reflective nostalgia
- post-nostalgia
- nostalgia and (post-)apocalypse
- identity, nostalgia and counter-memory in (literary, film, television) genre fictions
- steampunk, nostalgia and media archaeology
- commodifying nostalgia and the screen industries: rebooting, franchising, cross-marketing
- nostalgia, sf audiences and fandom
This special issue will be guest edited by Aris Mousoutzanis
(A.Mousoutzanis@brighton.ac.uk) and Yugin Teo (yteo@bournemouth.ac.uk). Please
send abstracts of 300-400 words by December 31, 2019 to both editors. After an
initial review of proposals, selected essays will be invited to submit full
drafts (6,000-7,000 words) due in May 2020. The issue will be published March
2021.
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