Postmodern Metanarratives: Blade Runner and Literature in the Age of Image
Postmodern Metanarratives: Blade Runner and Literature in the Age of Image is a non-fiction book by Décio Torres Cruz published in 2014 by Palgrave Macmillan.
Since its release, Postmodern Metanarratives has been included in undergraduate and graduate course lists.[2][3] It has been cited in books, papers and scientific articles in academic journals,[4][5][6][7]
The book review in chapter XVII: American Literature: The Twentieth Century of The Year's Work in English Studies by James Gifford and others states that this book
provides an extended examination of the film Blade Runner in the context of theories of postmodernism, especially the subgenre of cyberpunk and Charles Jencks's understanding of metanarrative: 'a narrative that talks about the process of its own making’ and 'inquires about its constituent nature’ and its appropriation of and 'similitude with' other narrative forms 'in the pursuit of change' (pp. 36–7). For literary scholars of the post-1945 period, Cruz's engagement with the contemporary fictional texts upon which the movie draws may be of most interest. For example, in chapter 6, 'Collating the Postmodern', Cruz explores the influence of Burroughs’s Blade Runner, a Movie, Alan Nourse’s novel The Bladerunner, and Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, while charting thematic differences and similarities between literary precursors and the film.[8]
Contents
Besides the introduction and the conclusion, the book comprises 12 chapters:
On Words and Meanings: Contradictions of the Modern or Postmodern Contradictions?
Literature and Film: A Brief Overview of Theory and Criticism
Blurring Genres: Dissolving Literature and Film in Blade Runner
Revisiting the Biblical Tradition: Dante, Blake and Milton in Blade Runner
Revisiting the Psychoanalytical Tradition
Collating the Postmodern
When Differences Fall Apart
From Conception to Inception: A Never-Ending Story
Deleted and Alternate Scenes in BR
The Workprint
Postmodern Renaissance: The Final Cut and the Rebirth of a Classic 25 Years Later
Recycling Media: Blade Runner to Be Continued
The conclusion is entitled "Replicating Life and Art" and may be considered an extra final chapter. Besides revising the topics previously discussed, the conclusion also discusses some aspects of the American culture and establishes connections with other science-fiction novels, such as Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 and Aldous Huxley's Brave New World.
References
^Cruz, Décio. Postmodern Metanarratives: Blade Runner and Literature in the Age of Image. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016. Back cover.
^Gifford, James; Clawson, James M.; Foltz, Mary; Ussner Kidder, Orion; Armstrong, Jolene; Parker, Lindsay (2016). "XVII American Literature: The Twentieth Century". The Year's Work in English Studies. 95 (1): 1091–1223. doi:10.1093/ywes/maw019.