CfP/CfA events

Representations and Visions of the Future in Modernist Literature (Niagara Falls, NY)

Beginning
23.03.2023
End
26.03.2023
Abstract submission deadline
30.09.2022

Several examples of literature produced from the late Victorian age narrate great concerns about the future and the destiny of humanity, concerns that would be significantly exacerbated in the twentieth century by the Great War, soon followed by the Second, the unspeakable savagery of Nazis, the nuclear detonations in Hiroshima and Nagasaki and, last but not least, by the terror of a nuclear apocalypse during the long Cold War. Modernism appears thus as a cultural movement that, as Vincent Sherry maintains, “works most indicatively within an imaginative concept of time interrupted”, of a time that presents itself basically as provisional and utterly deprived of a future. Concentrating on the literature produced from the late Victorian age to the Cold War, a period in the history of humanity in which there was a great deal of apocalyptic feeling, this panel aims to explore the way in which modernist writers portray the future (of the world and of humanity). Think, for example, of Stevenson’s Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, Wells’ The War of the Worlds or The War in the Air, Lawrence’s Apocalypse, Beckett’s Endgame, Bion’s The Dawn of Oblivion, or Orwell’s 1984: the future of the world, and consequently of human beings, became central to the literature produced in those decades. What are, then, the predictions for the future made by several modernist writers? How did late-Victorian degeneration theory influence the visions of the future in those years? How did the two World Wars and the nuclear menace during the Cold War mould the general perception of the future? How did modernist writers depict the sense of provisionality and decadence that was spreading in those decades? How did writers deal with the notions of planetary habitability and human annihilation from the late Victorian age to the Cold War?

Source of description: Information from the provider

Fields of research

Themes, motifs, thematology, Literature of the 19th century, Literature of the 20th century
Zukunft

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Contact

Institutions

Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA)

Addresses

Niagara Falls, NY
United States

Relations

Institutions

Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA)
Date of publication: 29.07.2022
Last edited: 29.07.2022