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Offering a survey of Hollywood science fiction cinema from 1979 to
2017 (from Ridley Scott's Alien to Denis Villeneuve's Blade Runner
2049), Dystopia and Dispossession in the Hollywood Science Fiction
Film argues that the trajectory of Hollywood's dystopianism in that
period is inextricable from the phenomenon of the 'new enclosures',
the new dispossessions and privatisations sweeping across the
United States since the 1970s. More precisely, it contends that the
critiques of such dispossessions elaborated before the turn of the
century - consider the satire of private policing in RoboCop
(1987), the portrayal of commodified air in Total Recall (1990),
and the nightmarish extrapolations of postmodern urbanism in Blade
Runner (1982) and The Truman Show (1998) - begin to disappear in
films such as The Matrix (1999), The Island (2005), District 9
(2009), Repo Men (2010), and The Purge (2013), the further
commodification of land, forest, reservoir, ideas, even the human
genome having diminished the contrast between capitalist and
non-capitalist spaces on which the earlier critiques depended.
Bringing close readings of blockbuster films into dialogue with
historical and theoretical scholarship on dispossession, Dystopia
and Dispossession in the Hollywood Science Fiction Film proposes a
new understanding of the politics of science fiction in particular
and utopian thought in general.
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