Log In
Or create an account ->
Imperial Library
Home
About
News
Upload
Forum
Help
Login/SignUp
Index
Also available from Bloomsbury
Title
Contents
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
Philosophy and science fiction
Bergson and Dick at the edge of the known
The ethics of balking
Philip K. Dick studies
Note on terminology
1 Fabulation: Counteracting Reality
Mechanization and the war-instinct
The biological origins of society
Countering the intellect
The morality of violence
Open morality and the misdirection of mechanism
True mysticism: Immanent salvation
An incomplete soteriology
Fabulation for the open
Conclusion
2 Fabulating Salvation in Four Early Novels
Solar Lottery (1972 [1955])
The World Jones Made (1993b [1956])
Vulcan’s Hammer (1976c [1960])
Time Out of Joint (2003c [1959])
Conclusion: Super–everyman to solar shoe salesman
3 The Empire that Never Ended
A matter of life or (life under the sign of) death
The open and the universal
The life–death chiasmus
The fictitious event
The messianic tension
The remnant and messianic time
The magic of language
Sci-fi: The genre of ‘as not’
Conclusion: Gnostic politics
4 Objects of Salvation: The Man in the High Castle
The fabulation of history
Mechanization and paralysis
Worldly remains
Openings between worlds
The tyranny of the concrete
Objects of salvation
Conclusion: Reality fields
5 How We Became Post-Android
The mechanization of pot-healing
The alien god
The saviour in need
Robot theology
Humans: The cosmic bourgeoisie
Android and theoid
Creative destruction
Conclusion
6 The Reality of Valis
Salvator salvandus
The believer and the sceptic
The pharmakonic god
Reduplicative paramnesia (time becomes space)
The fabulative cure
Recursion: Valis as limitlessly iterative soteriology
Befriending god
Conclusion
Epilogue: Soter-ecologies
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Copyright
← Prev
Back
Next →
← Prev
Back
Next →