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Demanding the Impossible

Author: Simon Sellars • Dec 3rd, 2007 •

Category: Australia, Ballardosphere, Pacific, academia, alternate worlds, dystopia, micronations, utopia

All Melbourne crew are welcome to come and heckle me this Wednesday (Dec 5, 1pm) at Monash University. I’m giving a paper on Ballard at Demanding the Impossible: The Third Australian Conference on Utopia, Dystopia and Science Fiction.

Here’s my abstract:

‘Zones of Transition’: J.G. Ballard’s Pacific Utopias
Simon Sellars, Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies, Monash University, Clayton, Australia

This paper examines how J.G. Ballard’s writing ambiguously deploys abandoned Pacific islands as sites of radical reinvention, tracing the decline of Japanese imperialism in the region and the rise of American-led globalisation. The Pacific’s history is riddled with examples of coup-ridden and colonised islands, and islands used as nuclear testing grounds. I explore how Ballard, using the language of micronationalism, retools such ‘zones of transition’ as ’states of mind’, metaphoric buffer zones representing the sovereignty of the imagination, which he sees as a vital strategy in the post-war age of simulation. But the ‘dark side’ of Ballard’s utopianism is also apparent in the novel Rushing to Paradise, about a feminist ecotopia in the Pacific, which I read not only as an indictment of utopian gurus such as David Koresh, but also as a clear warning about the danger of extrapolating utopia from the imagination into reality.

Seriously, this is a new area for me: I’ve written on the Pacific as a travel writer, and even refracted it through a Ballardian lens, but not academically. Partly I’m attempting to read Ballard through Fredric Jameson’s writings on utopia and my paper is very much a work in progress. Any and all feedback is appreciated. I believe there is talk of publishing selected papers from the conference online, but if that doesn’t come off for me, I’ll post mine here on ballardian.com.

Here are the conference details:

Demanding the Impossible: The Third Australian Conference on Utopia, Dystopia and Science Fiction
5th-7th December 2007
A conference organised by the Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies at Monash University

+ Home Page
+ Conference Programme

Keynote Speakers
TERRY EAGLETON
Professor of Cultural Theory and John Rylands Fellow at the University of Manchester.

TOM MOYLAN
Glucksman Professor of Contemporary Writing and Director of the Ralahine Center for Utopian Studies, University of Limerick

LYMAN TOWER SARGENT
Professor Emeritus of Political Science, University of Missouri, St. Louis, and Visiting Fellow, Mansfield College, University of Oxford

LUCY SUSSEX
Distinguished Australian science fiction writer and author of A Tour Guide in Utopia

Other Speakers will include:
Andrew Benjamin (Professor of Critical Theory, CCLCS), Roland Boer (Associate Professor, CCLCS), Ian Buchanan (Professor of Critical Theory, Cardiff University), Verity Burgmann (Professor of Politics, University of Melbourne), Jacqueline Dutton (Senior Lecturer in French, University of Melbourne), Andrew Milner (Professor of Cultural Studies, CCLCS), Chris Palmer (Head of English, La Trobe University), Kate Rigby (Associate Professor, CCLCS).

Further Information

http://arts.monash.edu.au/lcl/conferences/utopias3

Carlo Salzani or Dimitris Vardoulakis
Tel: +61 (3) 99059009
Fax: +61 (3) 99055593
Email: Utopias@arts.monash.edu.au

Author: Simon Sellars
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7 Responses »

  1. Good luck. Would like to come along but I am constrained by employment and lack of funds, but look forward to reading the paper. Looks like an intriguing conference.

    Interestingly I attended Manchester Uni and saw Eagleton only once in 3 years. Persumably he was drawing his salary whilst attending enjoyable events such as this. Amazing what institutions will pay for a bit of academic prestige.

  2. thanks, should be fun. as long as i don’t piss-pronunciate my worms.

  3. Good Luck Simon,

    I’m sure you’ll be articulate and reward the audience with a thoughtful and poignant paper.

    I’ll look forward to hearing it. Be careful of those malapropisms. You’re already a master. x

  4. Thanks, Mr S! My mum used to tell me to imagine the Queen on the bog as a way to calm nerves during public squeaking…whoops, I mean ’speaking’. Mum’s English, though. I’m sure she wouldn’t mind me imagining Kevin Rudd on the dunny instead.

  5. Thanks and looking for yr future publications,
    Simon. Writing a paper and then delivering it
    before a crowd is some of the hardest work I
    know. Always stressful. I thinnk you have
    probably completely mastered your topic, though. No Sweat.

  6. Thanks Crash! Unfortunately, I think I have a long way to go before I’m able to master something as complex as Ballard’s work. Still, am having fun trying.

  7. Now I’m tortured by the thought of Budding Kevin. After just finishing Rushing to Paradise (my first Ballard), I will be anticipating your paper to compliment my own understanding with an academic twist. Perfect timing!

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