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      • Trusted Partner

        Among the Sheep

        by Oleksandr Koreshkov

        Something has clicked in the world order, and you have a chance to look at things around us from a different angle. What is: "fear of being human"? What is it like to "see wrongdoing and remain silent"? When do we turn into our executioners? You avoid such difficult questions to the last. Maybe it would be better to use the example of one dog that lives in a world of total fear, lies and greed? Lives like a sheep among sheep...

      • Trusted Partner
        Children's & YA
        March 2021

        My Upside Down World

        by Ken Spillman and Silvana Giraldo

        “This is a TRUE story. It’s about my world” There’s smoke in the kitchen. Dad acts normal but Mom is worried her head might explode. Even so, the biggest problem is global. You-Know-Who has been at it again and the world must be put right. Today! Big brothers are mean. Big brothers spell trouble. And Big Brothers are not to be trusted, especially if they turn your world upside down. Or is it downside up? In this book where the parallel crazy worlds with their upside-downness and downside-upness weave a fantastic, troubled, creased co-existence, nothing is what it seems like and everything is up for wonder. Ken Spillman adroitly plays around with words and situations both believable and unbelievable, while Silvana Giraldo spins a splendidly broken-but-beautiful world to bring alive an Orwellian dystopia into this picture book.

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        September 2020

        Cosmopolitan dystopia

        by Philip Cunliffe

      • Trusted Partner
        Colonialism & imperialism
        September 2015

        Imperial expectations and realities

        El Dorados, utopias and dystopias

        by Edited by Andrekos Varnava

        This volume explores how imperial powers established and expanded their empires through decisions that were often based on exaggerated expectations and wishful thinking, rather than on reasoned and scientific policies. It explores these exaggerations through the concepts of El Dorado, utopias and dystopias - undertakings based on irrational perceived values - in case studies from across the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries, and incorporates imperial traditions including Scottish, British, French, German, Italian and American. Various colonial spaces are considered, from the Mediterranean, Middle East, Africa, Australia, Asia and the Americas, and in doing so, the contributors offer new insights into the nature of imperialism and colonial settlement.

      • Trusted Partner
        Science fiction (Children's/YA)
        September 2019

        La Nacionalien

        by Sandro Bassi

        How often do you check your cell phone? Do you wear it while you walk or take the bus? In the subway? Do you have WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook? How many likes did you get this week? The cell phone is without any doubt your door to the rest of the world. It connects you, but more important, you disconnect.

      • Trusted Partner
        September 2003

        Heterotopia

        Studien zur Krisis der Ordnung moderner Gesellschaften

        by Helmut Willke

        Das erste Erschrecken gilt immer dem Fremden. Als dritter Band der Atopia-Trilogie entfaltet Heterotopia Beobachtungen über den Umgang mit Fremdem. Heterotopia bezeichnet eine Welt, die aus der Selbsthypnose einer nationalstaatlich organisierten Hyperordnung erwacht und sich nun in einer anderen Realität wiederfindet. Diese ist von den Zumutungen der hochgetriebenen Kontingenzen Atopias ebenso geprägt wie von den symbolischen Verwerfungen Dystopias, aber sie ist auch eine Welt, deren Ordnung als Ordnung grundlegend erschüttert ist. Heterotopia beschreibt diese Auflösung der Ordnung hyperkomplexer Gesellschaften. Die drei Bände finden ihren Zusammenhang darin, daß sie die Erschütterung grundlegender Gewißheiten der Moderne beschreiben. Die Ordnung der Territorien, die Ordnung des Wissens und die Ordnung der Ordnung nationalstaatlich organisierter Gesellschaften stehen auf dem Spiel. Ziel des Bandes ist es, für den Fall hockkomplexer Systeme den notwendigen übergang von unmöglicher Ordnung zu möglicher Unordnung plausibel zu machen.

      • Trusted Partner
        The Arts
        June 2017

        Terry Gilliam

        by Peter Marks

        Terry Gilliam presents a sustained examination of one of cinema's most challenging and lauded auteurs, proposing fresh ways of seeing Gilliam that go beyond reductive readings of him as a gifted but manic fantasist. Analysing Gilliam's work over nearly four decades, from the brilliant anarchy of his Monty Python animations through the nightmarish masterpiece Brazil to the provocative Gothic horror of Tideland, it critically examines the variety and richness of Gilliam's sometimes troubled but always provocative output. The book situates Gilliam within the competing cultural contexts of the British, European and American film industries, examining his regular struggles against aesthetic and commercial pressures. He emerges as a passionate, immensely creative director, whose work encompasses a dizzying array of material: anarchic satire, childhood and adult fantasy, dystopia, romantic comedy, surrealism, road movie, fairy tale and the Gothic. The book charts how Gilliam interweaves these genres and forms to create magical interfaces between reality and the illuminating, frightening but liberating worlds of the imagination. Scrutinising the neglected importance of literature and adaptation in Gilliam's career, this study also observes him through the lenses of auteurism, genre, performance, design and national culture, explaining how someone born in Minnesota and raised in California came to be one of British television and film's most compelling figures.

      • Trusted Partner
        The Arts
        August 2009

        Terry Gilliam

        by Peter Marks, Brian McFarlane, Neil Sinyard

        Terry Gilliam presents a sustained examination of one of cinema's most challenging and lauded auteurs, proposing fresh ways of seeing Gilliam that go beyond reductive readings of him as a gifted but manic fantasist. Analysing Gilliam's work over nearly four decades, from the brilliant anarchy of his Monty Python animations through the nightmarish masterpiece Brazil to the provocative Gothic horror of Tideland, it critically examines the variety and richness of Gilliam's sometimes troubled but always provocative output. The book situates Gilliam within the competing cultural contexts of the British, European and American film industries, examining his regular struggles against aesthetic and commercial pressures. He emerges as a passionate, immensely creative director, whose work encompasses a dizzying array of material: anarchic satire, childhood and adult fantasy, dystopia, romantic comedy, surrealism, road movie, fairy tale and the Gothic. The book charts how Gilliam interweaves these genres and forms to create magical interfaces between reality and the illuminating, frightening but liberating worlds of the imagination. Scrutinising the neglected importance of literature and adaptation in Gilliam's career, this study also observes him through the lenses of auteurism, genre, performance, design and national culture, explaining how someone born in Minnesota and raised in California came to be one of British television and film's most compelling figures. ;

      • October 2017

        The Forgotten

        by Léna Jomahé

        250 years after World War IV, only a few cities manage to remain, protecting their population thanks to the domes separating them from the rest of the world. Every year, the New Global Order determines the future of all the sixteen-year-old. And every year, some of them disappear. They are called the Forgotten.Eléa’s best-friend is one of them.

      • March 2020

        Schatten über den Brettern

        by David Misch

        A theater actor in times of increasing repression. He is torn between social demands and the pursuit of self-realization. His characters and roles, which he doesn't have to play because they've become real inside of him, mean everything to him. A cultural ordinance threatens to take them away from him and the struggle against the new authority in the country calls into question his relationships and his own identity more than ever. In his first novel, David Misch conjures up an abysmally evil power that emerges from the middle of a society in which reflections and admonishing memories are fading. A concrete dystopia: warning.

      • Fiction

        12 degrees below zero

        by Anna Herzig

        The dystopia of being a woman in a man’s world Greta is six months pregnant. Following a romantic evening with her soon-to-be-husband Henri, a solicitor’s letter lands on the doormat. Greta owes Henri €24,000 – the cost of several months of fertility treatment. Henri doesn’t intend to leave her; he simply wants his money back. She has fourteen days to pay before he files a lawsuit against her. Greta turns to her older sister for help. The sister who was bullied by their father while Greta was his favourite. The sister who let her anger out on Greta, for want of another way to deal with things. The messy family circumstances in which the two girls grew up are gradually revealed: their father was the model patriarch, while each day their mother did her best to prevent either herself or her daughters ruffling his feathers. The soup must never be cold. Everything had to be perfect. But what if “perfect” isn’t achievable? What if “perfect” doesn’t even exist?

      • Fiction
        June 2021

        Dreaming in Quantum and Other Stories

        by Lynda Clark

        Contains ‘Ghillie’s Mum’ – shortlisted for the 2019 BBC National Short Story Award, 2020 ALCS Tom-Gallon Trust Award and regional winner of the Commonwealth Short Story Prize for Europe and Canada.   From the award-winning short story author, Lynda Clark, comes this debut collection of sixteen stories, all written in Lynda’s darkly humorous style and playing on themes of multiple realities and dystopian futures.   In ‘My Invisible Wife’, a man is learning how to live with a gradually disappearing wife. In ‘Dreaming in Quantum’, there’s a murder to be solved with echoes through different dimensions only accessible in dreams. In ‘Ghillie’s Mum’, a shape-shifting mother needs to decide whether to compromise and stay in her human form or lose her son. And in ‘Blanks’, people are paying to create clones of themselves so they’ll never die.

      • Fiction

        Watch Dogs Legion - Underground Resistance

        by SYLVAIN RUNBERG & GABRIEL GERMAIN

        2024, London is under lockdown following the crash of British economy after the Brexit. A new surveillance state is in place to restore order through violence and control over the citizen's lives. But here and there, crews of Hacktivists rise and rally behind DedSec banner. Follow the adventures of a cell going head-on against baddies to expose the abuse of this new order. Discover the fight of DJ Adam Logan's cell against clan Kelley, the new Irish Mafia controlling the black market, within this stamina-packed dystopian thriller immersed in London electronic music underground scene.

      • Qât

        by Jean-Marc Cosset

        Thriller - Dystopia - Science fiction - Novel  Et si... Et si, après le Grand Tournant, dans ce qui fut Paris, les trois religions du Livre, Judaïsme, Catholicisme, Islam, s'étaient fondues en une seule... Et si pour faireaccepter au peuple l"épouvantable misère qui avait suivi l'effondrement des civilisations occidentales, les Dirigeants s'étaient inspirés de la solution de l'abrutissement par le Qât, cette drogue mâchée depuis des temps immémoriaux au Yémen... Et si un jeune médecin, Stefan, se battant comme un damné contre des maladies devenues presque toutes mortelles par manque quasi-total de médicaments, rejoignait, pour l'amaour d'une de ses jeunes infirmières, le groupe de réfractaires qui s'étaient autoproclamés les "résistants" au risque de finir enfournés tout vifs dans les broyeurs des Dirigeants...

      • Fiction
        May 2024

        Lift

        The Rise of Mathe-Lingua-Musica

        by Ray Anderson

        With Earth on the brink of total annihilation, can a new universal language unite the world enough to save it? It’s 2422 and the world’s governing mathematicians have calculated that society’s struggles with rampant war and homicide have put humanity on a crash-course with extinction. With an estimated fifteen months left until humankind’s total annihilation,the World Council of Mathematicians (WCM) determine the only way out of the crisis is to create the optimum language for humans, creating common understanding across all cultures and allowing them to work together for their joint salvation. The WCM and Charles De Costa, a brilliant mathematics student, must rely on LIFT, a scientific breakthrough that allows them to enlist the aid of the greatest minds in history, to create this new world language based on mathematics, linguistics, and music. Can the great minds of the past help lead humanity to a better future? Can this new language be created in time? Or will society’s continued evil and miscommunication lead the world to an inevitable end?

      • Fiction
        February 2020

        Earth

        by Eloy Moreno

        The problem of finding the truth is not knowing what to do with it. A story that will change the way we see the world. A bestselling author who touches the most sensitive nerves.  A group of people live together in a nameless place. Why are they there? How did they get there? And above all, who are they? Or who have they become? We know nothing about them. Just what their actions tell us. In a lawless world, where everything that made up society has disappeared, what is left of us? A story full of unknowns, of big questions about the world we live our lives in, that asks us if the things we think are important really are. The author’s major themes are feelings, absurdity, society, and the importance of following our dreams.

      • Education

        Educated Fear and Educated Hope

        Dystopia, Utopia and the Plasticity of Humanity

        by Papastephanou, M.

        Beyond dominant tendencies to contrast utopia and ideology, the book reconceptualizes utopia and approaches it along with the notion of dystopia. The interplay of utopia and dystopia is examined, some major anti-utopian arguments are refuted and a new utopianism emerges, one that radicalizes critique and makes engagement with present global realities more pressing. Educated fear, i.e., a critical awareness of dystopian realities, and educated hope, i.e., a critical awareness of the possibility of human perfectibility cohabit a theoretical space that breaks with utopianist modern theoretical underpinnings and becomes historically and spatially more inclusive, while retaining the motivational and justificatory force of ethical imagery. If education is not just an institution of unreflective socialization, if it is about futurity, it has to renegotiate utopian thought. As the interest in utopia is being renewed both in general philosophy and philosophy of education and as dystopia is still neglected, a book that re-defines utopianism and explores for the first time the role of dystopia in radicalizing educational demands for systemic change is indispensable for Utopian Studies, Philosophy and Philosophy of Education academics and students alike. The title of the book is first transliterated into Utopia, a typeface in which Brazilian artists Angela Detanico and Rafael Lain replace capital letters with the iconic buildings of Brazil´s foremost modernist architect, Oscar Niemeyer, whilst lower-case letters are equated with urban interferences such as fences, skateboarders, CCTV cameras, electricity cables, in short, all those elements that escaped the utopian dream of the architect. To me, it bears associations of the philosophical notion of counterfactuality and of Adorno´s notion of mimesis. The title is then transliterated into Helvetica Concentrated (a digital typeface that concentrates the surface of Helvetica characters in dots which has been created by Detanico and Lain in collaboration with Jiri Skala). The term Helvetica bears the associations of a modernist utopia of success, performativity, prosperity, predictability, rational planning and uniformity.

      • Children's & YA
        September 2021

        Disidentes | Dissidents

        by Rosa Huertas

        Ada lives in a perfect world and leads a perfectly organised life in Sector 7. Everything there is aseptic: there are no wars or diseases, and history and art are unnecessary. Things seem to be under control, until one day Ada’s world falls apart. She flees to the polluted city, a Madrid in ruins where she is to discover a reality that will make her doubt her deepest convictions. A dystopian novel that addresses the issues of our times: freedom, truth, disease and social control.

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