BETWEEN THE WASTE LAND AND NO PLACE: CHRISTOPHER NOLAN’S FUTURISTIC DYSTOPIA INTERSTELLAR (2014)

Since the 1990s the number of dystopian fi lms projecting apocalyptic visions of global catastrophe and dramatizing an ecological agenda has radically increased. Much of this trend is inspired by anxieties about the future repercussions of today’s actions and the collective responsibility for the...

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Main Author: Patrycja Podgajna
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wydawnictwa AGH 2016-06-01
Series:Studia Humanistyczne AGH
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.bg.agh.edu.pl/STUDIA/2016.15.2/human.2016.15.2.51.pdf
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spelling doaj-a96fe02a4e4d4a41819f12c5e6ac63662021-10-02T03:26:50ZengWydawnictwa AGHStudia Humanistyczne AGH2084-33642016-06-01152515610.7494/human.2016.15.2.51BETWEEN THE WASTE LAND AND NO PLACE: CHRISTOPHER NOLAN’S FUTURISTIC DYSTOPIA INTERSTELLAR (2014)Patrycja Podgajna0Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in LublinSince the 1990s the number of dystopian fi lms projecting apocalyptic visions of global catastrophe and dramatizing an ecological agenda has radically increased. Much of this trend is inspired by anxieties about the future repercussions of today’s actions and the collective responsibility for the future of our planet. One fi lm that aptly represents this category is Christopher Nolan’s futuristic dystopia Interstellar (2014). Blending generic conventions of space-travel, science-fi ction and moral fable, the fi lm, with its bleak vision of ecological disaster, social unrest, and economic decline, clearly evokes the dystopian paradigm in which the projected reality is perceived as signifi cantly worse than the here and now (sensu Sargent 1994:5). However, contrary to many dystopias offering nihilistic or anti-utopian denouements, Christopher Nolan’s apocalyptic vision clearly posits a progressive and defi nite possibility of utopian impulse, which is encapsulated by the fi nal resolution of the global catastrophe. The core of the argument is that the neutralization of the dystopian impulse and the resulting projection of the utopian vision are facilitated by the imposition of an interstitial space constructed in the vein of postmodern poetics: an ambiguous fi fth dimensional library, in which books perform a two-fold function. While intratextually, they serve as a catalyst between the tangibly dystopian present and the possibly utopian future, extratextually, they function as a universal mode of communication transcending the constraints of time and space.http://journals.bg.agh.edu.pl/STUDIA/2016.15.2/human.2016.15.2.51.pdfdystopiaglobal catastropheecologyspacebooksutopia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrycja Podgajna
spellingShingle Patrycja Podgajna
BETWEEN THE WASTE LAND AND NO PLACE: CHRISTOPHER NOLAN’S FUTURISTIC DYSTOPIA INTERSTELLAR (2014)
Studia Humanistyczne AGH
dystopia
global catastrophe
ecology
space
books
utopia
author_facet Patrycja Podgajna
author_sort Patrycja Podgajna
title BETWEEN THE WASTE LAND AND NO PLACE: CHRISTOPHER NOLAN’S FUTURISTIC DYSTOPIA INTERSTELLAR (2014)
title_short BETWEEN THE WASTE LAND AND NO PLACE: CHRISTOPHER NOLAN’S FUTURISTIC DYSTOPIA INTERSTELLAR (2014)
title_full BETWEEN THE WASTE LAND AND NO PLACE: CHRISTOPHER NOLAN’S FUTURISTIC DYSTOPIA INTERSTELLAR (2014)
title_fullStr BETWEEN THE WASTE LAND AND NO PLACE: CHRISTOPHER NOLAN’S FUTURISTIC DYSTOPIA INTERSTELLAR (2014)
title_full_unstemmed BETWEEN THE WASTE LAND AND NO PLACE: CHRISTOPHER NOLAN’S FUTURISTIC DYSTOPIA INTERSTELLAR (2014)
title_sort between the waste land and no place: christopher nolan’s futuristic dystopia interstellar (2014)
publisher Wydawnictwa AGH
series Studia Humanistyczne AGH
issn 2084-3364
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Since the 1990s the number of dystopian fi lms projecting apocalyptic visions of global catastrophe and dramatizing an ecological agenda has radically increased. Much of this trend is inspired by anxieties about the future repercussions of today’s actions and the collective responsibility for the future of our planet. One fi lm that aptly represents this category is Christopher Nolan’s futuristic dystopia Interstellar (2014). Blending generic conventions of space-travel, science-fi ction and moral fable, the fi lm, with its bleak vision of ecological disaster, social unrest, and economic decline, clearly evokes the dystopian paradigm in which the projected reality is perceived as signifi cantly worse than the here and now (sensu Sargent 1994:5). However, contrary to many dystopias offering nihilistic or anti-utopian denouements, Christopher Nolan’s apocalyptic vision clearly posits a progressive and defi nite possibility of utopian impulse, which is encapsulated by the fi nal resolution of the global catastrophe. The core of the argument is that the neutralization of the dystopian impulse and the resulting projection of the utopian vision are facilitated by the imposition of an interstitial space constructed in the vein of postmodern poetics: an ambiguous fi fth dimensional library, in which books perform a two-fold function. While intratextually, they serve as a catalyst between the tangibly dystopian present and the possibly utopian future, extratextually, they function as a universal mode of communication transcending the constraints of time and space.
topic dystopia
global catastrophe
ecology
space
books
utopia
url http://journals.bg.agh.edu.pl/STUDIA/2016.15.2/human.2016.15.2.51.pdf
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