"Typescript of the Second Origin". Counterculture and Politics in the 1970s'

Empreu sempre aquest identificador per citar o enllaçar aquest ítem http://hdl.handle.net/10045/66707
Información del item - Informació de l'item - Item information
Títol: "Typescript of the Second Origin". Counterculture and Politics in the 1970s'
Autors: Maestre-Brotons, Antoni
Grups d'investigació o GITE: Recerca de la Literatura Contemporània
Centre, Departament o Servei: Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Filología Catalana
Paraules clau: Ciència | Ficció | Contracultura | Política | Utopia | Pedrolo
Àrees de coneixement: Filología Catalana
Data de publicació: 2017
Editor: University of South Florida Tampa Library
Citació bibliogràfica: Alambique: Revista académica de ciencia ficción y fantasía. 2017, 4(2): Article 1
Resum: This article explores how, like other science fiction and fantasy novels, Typescript of the Second Origin relates to 1970s counterculture, radical politics and anti-establishment movements. Pedrolo, a leftist and pro-independence strongly committed author, echoes the radical left’s breakaway from the bourgeois reactionary way of life and consumer society in the novel. The beginning of a post-apocalyptic era in the novel stands for some of the values attached to hippie culture: the search for an ‘authentic’ —natural, primitive, non-technological— life; anti-establishment activity —as shown in self-organisation and the dissolution of the political system—, universal solidarity —the first member of the new humankind is Mar, Alba and Dídac’s mixed-race son—, as well as sexual liberation —Mar’s parents are teenagers and sensuality and eroticism permeate the novel. However, the violent origin of the new era is ambivalent: whereas in other novels peaceful resistance to oppression brings about social change, the author’s stark message seems now that humankind must succumb to create a different world. Thus, the story resonates with the debate within counterculture and radical groups of the 1970s as whether the use of violence is legitimate or not to resist power. Despite violence, Pedrolo’s story depicts a melancholic feeling for change that the transition to democracy thwarted.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10045/66707
ISSN: 2167-6577
Idioma: eng
Tipus: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Drets: Creative Commons License Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Revisió científica: si
Versió de l'editor: http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/alambique/vol4/iss2/1
Apareix a la col·lecció: INV - GRLC - Treballs sobre Literatura del Jo

Arxius per aquest ítem:
Arxius per aquest ítem:
Arxiu Descripció Tamany Format  
Thumbnail2017_Antoni-Maestre_Alambique.pdf697,16 kBAdobe PDFObrir Vista prèvia


Tots els documents dipositats a RUA estan protegits per drets d'autors. Alguns drets reservats.