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| Hearsay: |
Margaret Atwood interviewed at the Globe where they speculate in the lede about whether her dystopian visions could come to pass. More important, I suggest to figure out whether or not some of them HAVE come to pass.
You’ve described The Year of the Flood as the blueprint for a possible future, a warning. Is it correct to describe this as a form of activist writing?
What is activism? I’m not an activist by nature. I’m a rabbit in the Eastern astrological chart, and we like to stay in our burrows and lead quiet lives. In the Western astrological chart, I’m a Scorpio, and we like to spend our time in the toes of shoes, and we’re quite happy there unless somebody puts their foot in. [laughs]
I mean, some people are professional activists. That would be Naomi Klein and other people. It’s their métier, it’s their business. So I would say that it’s not activist writing in that sense, since there is no “one thing” that I want the reader to do.
I don’t want you to come out from the book and sign a petition. I don’t want you to invent a disease that will wipe out humanity. I would say activist writing has a goal in mind, a very specific goal that they want the reader to do.
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July 27th, 2010 at 9:08 pm
The dystopia portrayed in The Year of the Flood is too cutesy and lacking people (even before the Waterless Flood) to possible come to pass. AnooYoo? Really?
July 27th, 2010 at 9:09 pm
Feh, that should obviously read ‘possibly’.
July 28th, 2010 at 10:06 am
It’s fiction and reflects Atwood’s imagination but not necessarily her predictions or goals. I enjoyed the book for what it was.
August 2nd, 2010 at 11:59 am
Well, as another Scorpio writer who can match her reclusiveness any day, I will just suggest that the current cinematic and literary interest in dystopia has its roots in a too-real phenomenon: the growing power of giant corporations.