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Johns Hopkins University | AS.060.385

U.S. Colonialism and Science Fiction

3.0

credits

Average Course Rating

(4.09)

Recent scholarship has noted the persistence of a colonial gaze in science fiction’s imaginations of the future. In the US, the earliest proto-science fiction emerged out of pulp stories about the violent settlement of the post-bellum Midwest. Similarly, figures such as the “alien other” and tropes of space exploration were inseparable from turn-of-the-century US imperial ventures. At the same time, diverse forms of speculative fiction have flourished that challenge and reinterpret the colonial assumptions of the genre. This course will focus on the links between US imperialism, settler colonialism and the “other worlds” imagined by science fiction, and the ways that writers have deconstructed technologies of scientific racism and colonial domination. As we read texts from H. G. Wells, Arthur C. Clarke, Ursula Le Guin, Octavia E. Butler, N. K. Jemisin, and watch Hollywood films like James Cameron’s Avatar or Marvel’s Black Panther, we will consider how science fiction raises provocative questions about the role of science and technology, race and gender in post-humanist imaginations, and the politics of futurity.

Spring 2023

Professor: Mitchell Cram

(4.09)