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Infrastructure in Dystopian and Post-apocalyptic Film, 1968–2021

Lessons from society’s frameworks at the end of the world.

Dystopian and post-apocalyptic movies from 1968 to 2021 usually conclude with optimism, giving the audience a window into what is possible in the face of social dysfunction. The infrastructure that peeks through at the edges of the frame surfaces some of the concrete ways in which dystopian and post-apocalyptic survivors have made do with their damaged and destroyed worlds. In this book, Christian B. Long argues that if the happy endings so common to mass-audience films do not provide an all-encompassing vision of a better world, the presence of infrastructure, whether old or retrofitted or new, offers a starting point for the continued work of building toward the future.

Film imaginings of energy, transportation, water, waste, and their combination in the food system reveal what might be essential infrastructure on which to build the new post-dystopian and post-apocalyptic communities. We can look to dystopian and post-apocalyptic movies for a sense of where we might begin.
 

238 pages | 6.69 x 9.61 | © 2024

Film Studies


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Table of Contents

List of Images
Acknowledgments 
Introduction: Infrastructure in Dystopian and Post-apocalyptic film, 1968-2021 
Chapter 1 Energy: Power is Power, Renewable or Not 
Chapter 2 Transportation: Filling Potholes at the End of Humanity’s Road 
Chapter 3 Water: Privatization Against Public Good 
Chapter 4 Food: Dystopian and Post-Apocalyptic Food Systems 
Chapter 5 Waste: The Social Relations of Trash and Recycling 
Chapter 6 Conclusion 
Works Cited

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