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Book review.(Archaeologies of the Future: The Desire Called Utopia and Other Science Fictions)(Book review)

The Hedgehog Review

| March 22, 2008 | Fredric., Jameson, | COPYRIGHT 2004 Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Archaeologies of the Future is a two-part volume in which Marxist literary critic Fredric Jameson presents a new, 233-page study of Utopia--which he unfailingly capitalizes--alongside twelve previously published essays on the subject. Reaching from Thomas More's Utopia (1516) to Kim Stanley Robinson's 1990s Mars novels, Part One (the new material on which I focus) is a rich meditation about how science fiction, its aliens,

and its impossible worlds remain closely tied to history. While a sharper overarching thesis has eluded my reading, it may be that the double negation of Jameson's slogan, "anti-anti-Utopianism" (xvi), inherently precludes an overt central claim.

Jameson's strength is his ability to encapsulate paradox. Even in the introduction, we are faced with

 
  the formal dilemma of how works the posit the end of history can 
  offer any usable historical impulses, how works which aim to resolve 
  all political differences can continue to be in any sense political, 
  how texts designed to overcome the needs of the body can remain 
  materialistic, and how visions of the "epoch of rest" (Morris) … 
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