Frank Herbert's Dune and the Financialization of Heroic Masculinity

Pearson focuses on Frank Herbert's novel Dune and the financialization of heroic masculinity. Dune is useful for thinking financialized, late capitalist moment; and second, that the concepts and concerns of our moment are useful for rethinking this science fiction classic. As a conscious readin...

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Veröffentlicht in:CR (East Lansing, Mich.) Mich.), 2019-04, Vol.19 (1), p.155-180
1. Verfasser: Pearson, Joshua
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Pearson focuses on Frank Herbert's novel Dune and the financialization of heroic masculinity. Dune is useful for thinking financialized, late capitalist moment; and second, that the concepts and concerns of our moment are useful for rethinking this science fiction classic. As a conscious reading strategy, such anachronism brings seemingly disparate elements of the novel that critics tend to treat separately (ecology, gender, heroism, politics, prophesy, colonialism) into productive new conjunctions. The novel's protagonist, Paul Atreides, we see these threads woven into a problematic masculine subjectivity that exemplifies capacities of risk management and affective manipulation central to the postindustrial financial market system.
ISSN:1532-687X
1539-6630
DOI:10.14321/crnewcentrevi.19.1.0155