The Political Novel: Edwin Frank on H.G. Wells and Ursula K. Le Guin
Join Edwin Frank for a three-session webinar on the novels of H.G. Wells and Ursula K. Le Guin
Date and time
Location
Online
Agenda
7:00 PM - 8:00 PM
November 3: The Time Machine/The Island of Dr. Moreau
Edwin Frank
7:00 PM - 8:00 PM
November 10: The Dispossessed
Edwin Frank
7:00 PM - 8:00 PM
November 17: The Dispossessed
Edwin Frank
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Highlights
- 14 days, 1 hour
- Online
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About this event
Three one-hour sessions: November 3, 10, 17. All sessions will start at 7pm EDT. Memberships begin at $99 (excluding Eventbrite fees). Full members and auditors will have access to recordings of each session that may be viewed after the live sessions conclude.
Science fiction has exercised a powerful shaping influence on the modern political novel: H.G. Wells’s breakthrough novella The Time Machine exposes the mirage of progress and in The Island of Dr. Moreau, an inspiration for Conrad's Heart of Darkness as well as Orwell’s Animal Farm, he depicts a dystopia driven both by colonialist exploitation and scientific enlightenment. Taking off from Wells, our final seminar will turn to Ursula K Le Guin’s The Dispossessed, in which anarchist collectivism and capitalist liberalism vie in the infinitude of outer space.
This course will use the Penguin Classics editions of The Time Machine and The Island of Dr. Moreau. We will use the Harper Perennial edition of The Dispossessed.
About Edwin Frank
Edwin Frank is editor of the NYRB Classics series and the author of Stranger than Fiction: The Lives of the Twentieth Century Novel.
About this series
We live in a political world, per Bob Dylan, and the song suggests that is not such a good thing. The modern novel grew up alongside the modern political world, and has kept a fascinated and incredulous eye on it for the last few centuries. In this seminar, Edwin Frank, editor of the NYRB Classics series and the author of Stranger than Fiction: The Lives of the Twentieth Century Novel, will look at three novelists—Anthony Trollope, Joseph Conrad, and Ursula K. Le Guin—and their different visions of politics.
In his six parliamentary (or Palliser) novels (1865-1880), the Victorian Trollope considers politics as a new profession, a distinctive dimension of national life, often questionable, not entirely respectable, full of the ambiguity natural to the human, but all things considered a force for the good.
Between 1899 and 1911, Joseph Conrad composed four prophetic novels (Heart of Darkness, Nostromo, The Secret Agent, Under Western Eyes) that charted the dark redoubts and central evils of the globalized modern world: colonialism, economic exploitation, terrorism, authoritarianism. For Conrad, politics was a dire disease, an inhumanity infecting both private and public life that threatened whatever humanity human beings laid claim to.
In The Dispossessed (1974), Ursula K. Le Guin, heir to the robust tradition of speculative political fiction initiated by H.G. Wells (The Time Machine, The Island of Doctor Moreau), examines the fate of an anarchist planet in an anarchic universe, posing in the starkest way the question that politics continues to struggle with: Who are "we"? What does it mean to be "us"?
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