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The Cult and the World System: The Topoi of David Mitchell's Global Novels
- Author(s):
- Scott Selisker (see profile)
- Date:
- 2014
- Group(s):
- GS Speculative Fiction, LLC 20th- and 21st-Century English and Anglophone, Speculative and Science Fiction, TC Cognitive and Affect Studies, TC Science and Literature
- Subject(s):
- British literature, Religion--Social aspects, Literature
- Item Type:
- Article
- Tag(s):
- Sociology of religion, World literature
- Permanent URL:
- http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/M6S10M
- Abstract:
- This article describes how the novelist David Mitchell employs the “topos of the cult,” a set of conventions that describe a mental state of unfreedom, in the novels Ghostwritten (1999) and Cloud Atlas (2004). This figuration of an unfree form of society—characterized by a group's specialized language, closed social spaces, and charismatic leadership—has its origins in antitotalitarian political science, fiction, sociology, and psychology. Mitchell and Haruki Murakami (discussed briefly) both question how this Cold War legacy has shaped our understandings of individual agency, and both novelists employ the conventions in characters who understand the world as a simple, single totality. For both writers, the cult serves to draw a contrast with the novels' own self-consciously complex cognitive maps of the contemporary world system.
- Metadata:
- xml
- Published as:
- Journal article Show details
- Pub. DOI:
- 10.1215/00295132-2789148
- Publisher:
- Duke University Press
- Pub. Date:
- 2014-11-7
- Journal:
- NOVEL A Forum on Fiction
- Volume:
- 47
- Issue:
- 3
- Page Range:
- 443 - 459
- ISSN:
- 0029-5132,1945-8509
- Status:
- Published
- Last Updated:
- 6 years ago
- License:
- All Rights Reserved
- Share this:
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