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358 Extrapolation, Vol. 51, No. 3 © 2010 by The University of Texas at Brownsville and Texas Southmost College Utopia At Last: Cormac McCarthy’s The Road as Science Fiction 1 CHRISTOPHER PIZZINO When I the old see, I know how much the new I need. — Samuel Delany To read The Road as science fiction is to read against a daunting critical consensus. Since the publication of Cormac McCarthy’s latest novel in the fall of 2006, reviewers and critics have approached it as a significant addition to the Euroamerican literary canon, sometimes with a glance at its science-fictional premise: the apocalyptic destruction of the world. Although the relationship between paraliteratures such as science fiction (hereafter sf) and “literature” is flexible at present, claims about the literary nature of The Road have tended either to be rigidly exclusive or to allocate a portion of sf for McCarthy’s use. The latter tendency is sharply observed by Michael Chabon, who notes that “many reviewers, if they have not chosen to bestow on The Road the dispensation of calling it a fable or a parable, seem to have read The Road as the turn toward science fiction that any established literary writer may reasonably be permitted” (24). Having noted this prescriptive critical tendency, Chabon himself approaches The Road not as sf, but as an epic in the mode of horror. Linking the respected tradition of the epic to horror fiction might productively trouble a different boundary between the literary and the paraliterary, but like many critics of the novel, Chabon suppresses generic concerns in favor of moralizing. He turns The Road into an exercise in guilt; it evokes the contemporary “fear

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Extrapolation,Vol.51,No.3©2010byTheUniversityofTexasatBrownsvilleandTexasSouthmostCollege

Utopia at last: Cormac McCarthy’s The Road as Science Fiction1

ChriStophEr pizzino

WhenItheoldsee,IknowhowmuchthenewIneed.—SamuelDelany

■ ToreadTheRoadassciencefiction is toreadagainstadauntingcriticalconsensus.SincethepublicationofCormacMcCarthy’slatestnovelinthefallof2006,reviewersandcriticshaveapproacheditasasignificantadditiontotheEuroamericanliterarycanon,sometimeswithaglanceatitsscience-fictionalpremise: theapocalypticdestructionof theworld.Although therelationshipbetweenparaliteraturessuchassciencefiction(hereaftersf)and“literature”isflexibleatpresent,claimsabouttheliterarynatureofTheRoadhavetendedeithertoberigidlyexclusiveortoallocateaportionofsfforMcCarthy’suse.Thelatter tendencyissharplyobservedbyMichaelChabon,whonotes that“manyreviewers,iftheyhavenotchosentobestowonTheRoadthedispensationof calling it a fable or a parable, seem to have readTheRoad as the turntowardsciencefictionthatanyestablishedliterarywritermayreasonablybepermitted”(24).Havingnotedthisprescriptivecriticaltendency,ChabonhimselfapproachesTheRoadnotassf,butasanepicinthemodeofhorror.Linkingtherespectedtraditionoftheepictohorrorfictionmightproductivelytroubleadifferentboundarybetweentheliteraryandtheparaliterary,butlikemanycriticsofthenovel,Chabonsuppressesgenericconcernsinfavorofmoralizing.HeturnsTheRoadintoanexerciseinguilt;itevokesthecontemporary“fear

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ofknowing—aseveryparentfears—thatyouhaveleftyourchildrenaworldmoredamaged,morepoisoned,morebaseandviolentandcheerlessandtoxic,moredoomed,thantheoneyouinherited”(26).Inthisview,McCarthy’snovelpossessessignificantmoralimpactasahorrorstorywithaconscience,whichitsomehowwouldloseiftakenseriouslyassf.InthecaseofTheRoad,evenacriticsympathetictoparaliteraturesingeneralseemstofeelthatreadingitassfisboundtodamageorconfineitssignificance,collapsingitsmoralvalences. ThemorefaithfullywereadTheRoadusingthedominantcriticallogic,themorescience-fictionalapproachesmightseemnotmerelyunproductivebut repugnant.Thenovel is,admittedly,deeplyconcernedwith theerasureofmoral significance.The protagonist, named simply “theman,” fights topreserveasenseofmoralityinthefaceofsocialbreakdownencompassingwidespreadtheft,suicide,rape,murderandcannibalism.Fortheman,thereisaclearlinkbetweenthesespecificdepredationsandthelossofmoraltruthingeneral;hethinksofacannibalheisforcedtokillasone“Whohasmadeoftheworldalieeveryword”(75).Boththegoalandthemeansoftheman’sstruggleagainstthismultifarious“lie”istheprotectionandnurtureofason,referredtoas“theboy,”forwhomthemantriesto“[e]voketheforms”(74)ofdecencyandsocialorder.“Evoketheforms”isamongthemostfrequentlycitedlinesincriticaldiscussion,andhascometofigurethemanhimselfasthe novel’s primary evocation of goodness. Isolated by hiswife’s suicide,threatenedby increasing illhealth,filledwith longingfor theworldhehaslostandsteeledagainstdespairbyloveforhisoffspring,themanseemstobeanidealcornerstoneforacharacter-basedexaminationofmoralconflict.Itiscertainlydifficulttojustifyascience-fictionalreadingofTheRoadifweseeitasaportraitofselflessparentallove(or,followingChabon,overwhelmingparentalguilt).Inthisview,toshiftthefocusawayfromtheman,ortocritiquehisstruggle,mightfinishwhattheapocalypsestartedandsnuffoutthelastremainingsourceofmoralityinthenovel’sworld. Asithappens,TheRoadoffersthepossibilityofmoralandsocialorderoutsidethefather-sonrelationship.Neitherthemannormostofhissympatheticreaderstakethispossibilityseriously,eventhough,aswewillsee,theboy’ssurvivaldependsonit.Further,thenovelworkstocritiquethemanthroughaschemeatoncedeeplysympatheticandsystematicallyruthless.McCarthyultimatelyrevealstheman’seffortsasinsufficient,bothfortheirimmediateends—thephysicalandmoralnurtureoftheboy—andforthelargerworkofassertingorderinthefaceofanomy.Approachingthenovelascanonical“lit-erature”suppresses,withoutresolving,itsdeepestandmostproductivetensions.Thoughitsplotconcernssurvivalinthefaceofdeprivationandterror,itsmostabidingquestionshavetodowithnarrativevalue—indeed,withthequestion

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ofnarrativeitselfasaproducerofvalues.ReadingTheRoadassfconfrontsuswithradicallydifferentquestionsaboutwherevalueliesinthetext,andaboutthedynamicwaysthecategoryofnarrativeoperatesinMcCarthy’svisionofapocalypse.Ifthecriticalconsensushasthusfarpositedthenovelasataleofsimple,desperatehumanvirtue,TheRoaditselfexpressesutopianimpulsesthatcomplicatetheframeworkinwhichvirtueisdefined. BydescribingTheRoadasutopian,Iwanttoevokeatemporallyinflectedsenseoftheconceptthatisfrequentlyvisibleincontemporarydiscussionsofsf.Initsearlyusage,descendedfromThomasMore,utopiaismostobviouslyaspatialtermnamingaplacewheresocial,moralorspiritualgoodnessandhealthprevail.Incontemporaryuses,includingthoseassociatedwithsf,thetermhasacquiredmoreandmoretemporalvalences,andrecenteffortstotheorizesfhavelikewisegivenprioritytothecategoryoftimeinrelationtoutopia.2InTheRoad,weseeutopianimpulsesexpressedlessasconcreteplanningforidealspacethanasanexpectationofsalutary,evenredemptiveevents.Thenovel’sruinedworldcertainlyforeclosesthepossibilityofagoodplaceresemblinganytraditionalmodelofautopia.However,thisdoesnotauthorizeareadinginwhichallvirtuesbelongtoavanishedpast,withthemanastheirlingeringrepresentative.Thereisstillthepossibilitythatlifecanbelivedonothertermsthanthoseofmurderandcannibalism,andthatthislifecancomenotfromremembranceofthepastbutfromanethicalcommitmenttofuturity—inthewordsofsftheoristMichaelPinsky,“anactingforthefutureandfromtheotherthatarrivesfromthefuture”(188).Itshouldbenotedthattheman’sgoalsseemspatiallyorganizedbutnotutopian.Thefatherhopesthatbytravellingsouth(fromwhatisnowthenorth-easternUS),heandhissonwillfindaplacewheretheycansafelysurvive,butthereisnoexpectationofanactualchangeinthenatureoftheirlives.Theboy’shopes,meanwhile,arefornewexperiencesandencounters,andtheyconnectthetexttosfthatanticipatestheadventofdifference,specificallythearrivalofnewformsofsocialbeing.Anunderstandingofsfastemporallyinflectedutopiannarrativewillbecrucialtomyreadingoftheboy,whotriestobridgethegapbetweenthestoriesthemantellshim,whichencourageresponsibilityfortheworldatlarge,andthewaythemanacts,whichgivesprimacytohimselfandtheboyonly. Toopenupthisgapandseeitasmeaningfuldemandsacriticalviewoftheprotagonist,whohaswonthesympathyofmostreadersandcritics.Theman’s efforts toprovide safety andwell-being forhis sonareusually readundertheheadingsofbiologyandethics;thenovelisassumedtobeaboutthedrive toprovideforone’soffspringandaboutfundamentalvalues thatfuelor complement this drive.BenjaminKunkel, in an essay on contemporaryapocalypticnarratives,dismissesTheRoadastypicalof“fantasiesofasocial

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situationradicallysimplifiedandennobledbytheimperativeofsurvival—alifeinwhichgood-versus-evilisallthatcanbesaidtoremainofeitherpoli-ticsormorality”(91).WhileIseethenovelasfarmorecomplex,Kunkel’sdescription,intendedasacritique,accuratelycapturesthedominantattitudeamongthenovel’smanyadmirers.Theblurbfeaturedonthefrontcoverofthefirstpaperbackprintingofthenovelclaimsitisa“taleofsurvivalandthemiracleofgoodness”(Villalonn.pag.).Notablehereistheconjunction“and”linkingtwokindsoftalesnottraditionallythoughtofasanaturalpair.Thereis certainly no given connection between them in theworld ofTheRoad,wherestarvingpeopleabandonmoralitytotheextentofcannibalizingothers,including(inatleastonecase)theirnewbornoffspring.Thisisonlythemostobviouswayinwhich“survival”and“goodness”areinconflict.Asthenovelunfolds, theoppositionbetweensurvival,asthefatherdefinesit—hisson’slifeastheultimatepriority,hisownlifeasvaluableonlyintheserviceofthatpriority—andalargersenseofgoodnessbecomesunmistakable. Thelinkbetweenmoralcertitudeandmortalstruggleoftenseemsclearinthenovel’searlychapters,especiallywhenthethird-personnarrator’svoiceflowsseamlesslyintoandoutoftheman’sperspective.Asinhisotherworks,McCarthydispenseswithquotationmarks,andthisstylisticchoicehelpstoauthorizetheman’sattachmenttohisson:“Heknewonlythatthechildwashiswarrant.Hesaid:IfheisnotthewordofGodGodneverspoke”(5).Theselinesinvitethereadertoaffirmwhatnarratorandprotagonistseemalreadytoknowwithcertainty—thattheboy’sexistenceisanunequivocalgood,andthatanythingdoneintheserviceofthisgoodhasdivine“warrant.”Giventhatthemanandtheboyareisolated,“eachtheother’sworldentire”(6),theman’sutteranceiseffectivelyakindofreaderaddress,interpolatingusinatrinityofmoralcertitude.However,thisinterpolationquicklybecomesunstable.Infact,thereisnooneotherthanthereadertowhomthefathercandeclarehiscertainty,becauseheiseithertoofearfulortoocautioustoconnecthimselftoalargercommunity.Whenhissonsightsaboyandencourageshisfathertoseekoutthegrouptowhichtheboymustbelong,thefatherrefuses.Heclaimstheriskistoogreat,andanumberofthenovel’sincidents—near-capturebycannibals,forinstance—showthatthefather’scautionisgroundedincommonsense.Yetcommonsensemightalsosuggestthatalivingchildisevidenceofparentsorguardianswhoarenotcannibals,andtheman’srefusaltofollowhisson’ssuggestionisachoicetodefinebothgoodnessandsurvivalinnarrowlyfamilial terms.The “warrant” the childprovides is exclusive, and themaninterpretshisson’sinterestinsomeotherchildasbothimpracticalandwrong. Thisincidentisthefirstsignificantclashbetweenfatherandson,exposingagapbetween“survival”(asthefatherconceivesit)and“goodness”(astheson

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understandsit)thatbecomesmorevisibleasthenovelprogresses.Theboystartstoobjecttotheman’sinsistenceonkeepingawayfromotherpeople,particularlyasthisinsistencebearsontheproblemofresources.Whateverdestroyedtheworldhashadtheeffectofanuclearwinter;plantandanimallifearealmostentirelydead,andfoodsuppliesareaccordinglylimitedanddwindling.Theboyrequeststhathisandhisfather’sfoodbesharedwithothers,butthefathereitherrefusesorallowsgrudgingandminimalsharing,underscoringthedifferencebetweenhisownunderstandingofgoodnessandhisson’s.Whenthesonurgeshisfathertoseekouttheotherchildhehasspotted,hevolunteerstogiveuphalfhisfoodsothattheboycanlive.Hissuggestionisriskyinconditionsofnear-starvation,butitdoesnotexactlyjustifytheman’sconvictionthathisson’sinterestintheboyistantamounttosuicide:“Doyouwanttodie?Isthatwhatyouwant?”(85)hedemands.Mostrelevanttothescience-fictionalqualitiesofTheRoadaretheson’sincreasinglyprobingandskepticalquestionsaboutthevalueshisfatherhasbeenimpartingtohim.Wearetoldthatthefatherhastriedtocommunicateasenseofmoralordertohissonthroughthetellingof“oldstoriesofcourageandjustice”(41).Thesestories,weassume,providethebackgroundforthenarrativethemanfabricatesinthepresent,whichisthatheandhissonare“carryingthefire,”aphrasethatrecursthroughoutthenovel.Theman’svagueformulationseemsanattemptto“[e]voketheforms”(74)ofmoralitywithoutsayingexactlywhatitmightbe.Thesondemonstratesanincreasingdesiretospecifythemeaningofhisfather’swords,andtotestthatmeaningagainsttherealityofhisfather’sactions.Afterthefatherkillsacannibaltoprotecthisson,theboyasks,“Arewestillthegoodguys?”(77).Inthisinstance,thequestionleadstoanaffirmativeliturgysharedbyfatherandson,whoassureeachotherthattheyarethegoodguysand“alwayswillbe”(77),butthismutualagreementdoesnotpersistinthelatterhalfofthenovel.Atonepoint,theboyaskswhetherheandhisfathermightmeetother“goodguys”ontheirjourney;thefatherreplies,“Idon’tthinkwe’relikelytomeetanygoodguysontheroad”(151).Theson’sequivocalretort,“We’reontheroad”(151),suggestsaskepticismaboutboththefather’sassuranceofhisowngoodnessandthefather’suniversalfearofothertravelers. The clashbetween father and son comes to a headwhen the sondoubtstheworthofthenarrativeshisfatherhasbeenconveyingtohim.Ofparticularimportanceisthefollowingconversation,inwhichthefatherspeaksfirst:

Doyouwantmetotellyouastory?No.Whynot?Theboylookedathimandlookedaway.Whynot?

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Thosestoriesarenottrue.Theydon’thavetobetrue.They’restories.Yes.Butinthestorieswe’realwayshelpingpeopleandwedon’thelppeople.

(267–68)

Thefatherchangesthedirectionoftheconversationinsteadofaddressinghisson’sfinalobjection,whichsuggests that it isvalid,notsimplyamatterofachild’sinabilitytodistinguishharshfactfrominspiringfiction.Thechildperceivesthatthefunctionofthestoriesismoretroublingthanthefatherwilladmit.Thelattertells“oldstoriesofcourageandjustice”nottoshowthesonhowtolive,buttomirroranidealizedimageofthefatherhimself.Itiscrucialthatthefatheractuallydoestellthesonstoriesthatimplyalargerobligationtotheworld;apparentlyhedoesnottellstoriesthathaveactuallyhappenedtothetwoofthem,whichwouldall involvehisactingforhissonalone.Itisequallycrucial that themorethechildreflectsonthesestories, themoreglaringlytheydifferfromtherealityofthefather’sbehavior.Twothingsareclarifiedinthispassage.Mostimmediately,weseetheson’sgrowingadher-encetoalargersetofethicalobligationsencompassingothersbesideshimselfandhisfather.However,andimportantly,thisadherenceisdirectlyinspiredbythefather’steachings.Ifthedifferencebetweenwhatthefatherpracticesandwhathepreachesisthecatalystfortheson’sconvictions,thisdifferenceisneverthelessproduced, ifunintentionally,bythefatherhimself.PassagesliketheaboveinvalidateBenjaminKunkel’scritiqueofTheRoadasabookthat“pitsfamilyvaluesagainstthecannibaluniverse—thegoodguysversusthebadguys,inMcCarthy’sunironicterms”(94).TheRoadshowshownar-rativesof“thegoodguysversusthebadguys,”taughttothesonbythefatherwithoutahintofconsciousirony,ironicallypushthesontowardanewpositiondifferenteitherfromhisfather’sorfromthatofthecannibalistic“badguys.” Thefullnessofthisironyisrevealedwhenthemansuccumbstoinjuryandillnesswithoutcommittinghissontothecareofothers.Ashedies,themanconverseswithhissonabouttheboyhesightedearlierinthenovel.Thesonwonders“whowillfind[thelittleboy]ifhe’slost,”andthefatherassureshim,“Goodnesswillfindthelittleboy.Italwayshas.Itwillagain”(281).Notably,theman gives utterance to temporal expectation—as opposed to his usualspatialplanning—andinwhatfollows,hisseeminglynaïvevisionofgood-nessinabadworldbecomesreal.Astrangerapproachestheboyandinformshimthatheispartofagroup(includingtwootherchildren)whoarewillingtotakehimin.Theconnectiontotheearlierincident,andtheearlierboy,isunmistakable,andcreatesanarrativesymmetrythatallowsustodescribethenovel’seventsthus:Amantravelingalonewithhissonavoidscontactwithallotherpersons,eventhoughhishealthisfailing.Ratherthanseekoutaboy

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hissonhasspotted,hechoosestoremainapartandfocussolelyonhisson’swell being.Later,when themanhimself has died, anothermanmakes theoppositechoiceandapproachestheman’ssonwithasincereofferofcareandcommunity,revealingthatthemanhad,fromthefirst,beenmistakennottoriskcontactwithothers.Mostcriticshavetakenlittleaccountofthisfinalturn.Inthecaseofthosewhoaffirmthefatherasthemoralcenterofthestory,thisiscertainlyunderstandable, since theconclusionundermineshisprivilegedposition.Alsounderstandable,fromadifferentangle,isKunkel’sinsistencethathopefulendingsdonotalterthefundamentallylimitedstanceofcontem-poraryapocalypticfiction,TheRoadincluded:“Thisfinalhopefulglimpseofavaguepaleradiancesuchasdyingpeoplearesaidtoseeseemsintendedtosignifysomethinglike‘theimmortalresilienceofthehumanspirit’ratherthananypossibilityofadecentearthlypolitics”(94).Butiftheadoptionofonechildintoanexistingcommunity(whichhastheshapeofanuclearfamily)isnotacompleteprogramfora“decentearthlypolitics,”neitherisitmerelyanexpressionofhumanistsentimentality.GiventheprecisenarrativesymmetryMcCarthyestablishes,thenovel’sfinalturntransformsthemeaningofwhathasgonebefore;“survival”and“goodness”arenotconnectedintherestrictivewaythemanimagines,atleastupuntilthemomentofhisdeath. TheconclusionalsorevealswhatChabon’sreadingofTheRoadasanexerciseinhorrorignores:theexpansionofscalethatiscrucialtoMcCarthy’snarrativedesign.Aestheticsofscalehavelongbeenunderstoodasimportanttosfinallmedia(mostfrequentlyundertheheadingofthesublime),butthewayscaledistinguishessffromhorrorisperhapsmostreadilygraspedinthecontextoffilm.3VivianSobchackarguesthathorrorfilmtendstocenteronmoralconflict,traditionallywithinanindividualstrugglingbetweendifferentaspectsofhisorherself.Somenewerhorrortrendshavetendedtokeeptheconflictsexternal;thestarvillainsofslasherfilmsrarelyseemtohaveanyinternalqualmsabouttheiractions.Thequestionofmoralityhasneverthelessremainedcentral,evenwhen,asinrecent“torture-porn”films,theissueisthetotalabsenceorperver-sionofmoralorder.ExtendingSobchack’spoint,wemightnotethatthenadirofmoralityinhorrorfilmsisusuallyrevealedinconfinedscenarios(secludedcabins,caves,basements,etc)thatsimplifymoralquestions,whilesffilmtendstopresentitsconflicts,moralorotherwise,frommultiplepointsofviewthatallowfordynamiccriticalevaluation.InSobchack’sphrasing,“Thepassionandhumanhungerofthehorrorfilmisreplacedbythesatisfactionsofobjectivity.Terrorisreplacedbywonder”(38).Frequently,ashiftofscaleispartofthisreplacement;asingle,confinednarrativeisrevealed,throughanenlargementofperspectiveorachangeofsetting,tobeonlyonenarrativepossibilityamongothers.TheRoadcertainlyfeelslikeaconfinednarrativeatseveralmoments,notleastwhenthe

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mandiscoversahellishbasementwherecannibalskeeplivingpeopleasafoodsource.Thesenseofconfinementisneverthelessundoneintheconclusion,whenapointofviewinitiallyannouncedasasourceoffundamentaltruth,seeminglyguaranteedbyourtrinitarianlinkingwiththemanandthenarrator,turnsouttobeacontingentperspectivenotsharedbyother“goodguys.”Whatfirstadvertisesitselfasanarchetypalstoryofgoodnessinapost-apocalypticworldbecomesastory thatexistsalongsideviable,evensuperioralternatives.Thisdoesnotentirelydispelthenoteofhorrorthatdominatesearlierportionsofthenovel,suchasthewrenchingscenewheretheman’swife,justbeforecommittingsuicide,insists,“We’rethewalkingdeadinahorrorfilm”(55).However,McCarthydoesinvalidatetheideathattheentirebusinessofliving,outsideoftheman’seffortstokeephimselfandhissonalive,isadamnedenterprise.Further,weseethatalternativesaremadepossiblebecausepeopleotherthanthemanfollownar-rativesdifferentfromtheoneheaccomplishes.Indeed,hisutopiandeclarationthat“Goodnesswillfindthelittleboy”isfulfilledonlybecauseothersenactakindofgoodnessthemanhasrefused;hespeaksacollectivetruthdespitethefactthathehasparticipatedinitsmakinginalimitedway. Andyet,thefatherdoesplayakeyroleinpreparinghissontoliveinthecommunitythatadoptshimbyencouraginganexpectationofcareandmutualaid.Inaninterludeatthecenterofthenovel,whenfatherandsonarerestinginabombsheltertheyhavediscovered,theson,takingahotbath,suddenlyremarks,“Warmatlast”(147).Thefatherisbothpleasedandbemused,asking,“Wheredidyouget that?”(147),but thesourceof theremarkisclearlythefather’sgenuinecarefortheboy’sphysicalwellbeing.Asenseofprotection,howeverthreatened,has created in theboy the expectationofphysical comforts andpleasureshehasnotyetexperiencedbutmayexperience“atlast.”Thelocationofthisscene,resonantwithColdWarxenophobia,mightreasonablymakeusskepticaloftheboy’ssatisfaction,butitdoesnotcomeattheexpenseofanyoneelse.Indeed,theboy’ssatisfiedhopeisnotphrasedintermsofexpenseorevenexpenditure.Shornofthetrappingsofcommodityfetishism—theboy’sdesirehasnotbeenshapedbyadvertisements,pre-packagednarrativesofluxury,orwindowshopping—andabsentanysenseofearnedordeservedreward,thishopeforshelterandsustenanceisonekindofutopianexpectationinitsnakedform,madepossibleby the father’s care.Morebroadly, the father’s storiesof“carryingthefire,”howeverlittletheymayfithisownconducttowardtheworld,neverthelessshapetheboy’sencounterwithhisnewcommunity.Thisisespeciallyevidentinthefollowingexchange,inwhichtheboyspeaksfirst,followedbythemanwhowilladopthim:

Areyoucarryingthefire? AmIwhat?

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Carryingthefire. You’rekindofweirdedout,aren’tyou? No. Justalittle. Yeah. Soareyou? What,carryingthefire? Yes. (283)

Thisconversationechoestheliturgicalrhythmsthatanimateearlierexchangesbetweentheboyandhisfather.Thefactthatthephrase“carryingthefire,”whileunfamiliartothenewguardian,yetservesasthebasisforanunderstandingbetweenhimandtheboy,showsthatthestoriesthefathertells,inexceedingtheethicalvalencesofhisownconduct,constructananticipatorybridgebetweentheboy’spresentandfuture. Whentheboyconnectshimselftoanactualcommunitybyreferencingvalueshehassofarencounteredprimarilyinnarrative,weseethatthefather’snurturehasunintentionallyfunctioned,toreturntoPinsky’sphrasing,as“anactingforthefutureandfortheotherthatarrivesfromthefuture”(188).Thisformulationderivesfromanunderstandingofsfasattunedbothtoanethicsofdifferenceandto theunfoldingofconcreteprocesses.ForPinsky,sfoscillatesbetweenthetwo,attendingbothtothehorizonofalterity(theOtherasapproachedbyLevinas)andto thespecificmaterialandtextualformsinwhichitmanifestsaswe apprehend it (techné as articulatedbyHeidegger).4This enactment isfundamental to thestructureandpurposeofTheRoad.At thesentence leveloftextualcomprehension,itdemandsmeticulousattentiontothedetailsoftheprotagonists’lives.NeverhasMcCarthy’swell-knownfocusonparticularsofsettingandaction—lessanaestheticinterestinsurfacethanaconcernwiththespecificityofexperience—beenmorefullyandurgentlyelaborated,andneverhave theparticularsmorestronglychallengedus to interrogatewhatwesee.Weighingthedetailsseriously,wemightbeled,liketheson,toquestiontheman’sactions.Ifheisdedicatedtohisson’ssurvival,whydoesheavoidallotherswhenitseemslikelyhisownhealthwillfailbeforehissonisoldenoughtofendforhimself?Ifhewantstoshowhissonhowto“carrythefire”ofcarefortheworld,whydoeshenotseekouttheboyhissonsees,whenheisaviableindicatorofagoodcommunity?Itispreciselyinaskingsuchquestionsthatwebegintoglimpsethehorizonbeyondthefather-sonrelationship—ahorizonbothblockedandanticipatedbythatrelationship.5Wearecertainlypromptedtodis-tinguishthefundamentallybackwardlookingnatureofthefather,whoimagineshissonseeshimas“analien...[a]beingfromaplanetthatnolongerexisted”

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(154),fromtheorientationofthetextasawhole,whichseesthefather’scareforhissonasapartialinstantiationofanethicsthatwillbemoreradicallyandfullyrealizedlater.Simultaneously,thelavishlyrenderedspecificsoftheman’sdailystruggletofeed,protect,andinstructhissonbecomeaprolepsis,pointingtowardtheveryfuturethemanconsciouslydenies. ThenarrativedynamicIamdescribingmakesTheRoadanunusualinstanceofsf;itexplorestheworkingsofutopianenergyinawaythatisintimateyettransformative.Ofparticularinterestisthefactthatthenovelinsistsonthedifferencebetween the father’s values and the son’swhile also tracing theconnections that bind them.The possibility of human care defined in new(non-familial,non-individualistic)termsisassertedasafundamentalrealitythatmakesutopianthinkingandfeelingpossible.Further,utopianpossibilityisdefinedasdecisivelydifferentfromthefather’snarrowlyfocused“warrant”;thenovelrefusestheideathattheson’svaluesaresimplythesameashisfather’s,onlywiderinscope.Thefather’scareforhissonistakenoverbyacommunitythatcaresformorethanitsownchildren,sothatthenovel’sinitiallynarrownotionofgoodnessmustbetransformedinordertosustainanymeaning(ifalladultsactedasthemanacted,hischildwouldnotsurviveintoadulthood).Atthesametime,theson’sutopianexpectationofthepossibilityofalargercommunity—oneinwhichpeopleotherthantheboyandhisfather“carrythefire”—iscreatedpreciselybyhisfather’sstories,which,intheireffectontheboy,exceedthefather’sownethicalboundaries.Whenthesonpointstothedifferencebetweenthevaluesthefathernarratesandthevalueshelivesby,heis,doubtless,pointingtothefather’sshortcomings.Hisownabilitytopointouttheseshortcomings,however,isitselflinkeddirectlytowhathisfatherhastoldhim.If,asheassertsinanargumentwithhisfather,heistheone“whohastoworryabouteverything”(259),theurgetoworry,toregisterthelargerworldasasubjectofcare,comesfromhisfather’sdirectiveto“carrythefire,”tobecountedamong“thegoodguys.”Thedetailsofthefather-sonexchangearesparse;weknowfarlessthanwemightwishaboutexactlywhatkindsofstoriesthemantellshisson.Whatweknowforcertainisthatgoodnessonlyfindstheboybecauseittakesformsotherthanthefather’sown,evenastheson’sabilitytoanticipateandenactgoodnessismadepossiblebythecarethefatherundertakes.6 Insofarasthefather’sstories,derivedfromavisionofthepast,enableagraspoffuturityfortheson,TheRoadisanovelabouttheoriginofsfnarratives—aboutwherewe“get”them,inthefather’sterms.ThisraisesthequestionofhowTheRoadcanbesituatedagainstthelargerbackgroundofsfasabodyofliterature,andhereIwanttousethenovelasavantagepointfromwhichtodistinguishtwoavenuesfortheorizingsf.Onetendency,towhichIhavealreadyalluded,promotes

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sfasautopiandiscourse.Thistendencyisnotnew;itwasimplicitinseveralmajorattemptstodefinesfinthe1970s,especiallyinSuvin’sMetamorphosesofScienceFiction(1979).Asiswell-known,Suvinarguesagainstcriticswhoseesfasprimarilyagenreofextrapolation,claiminginsteadthatitsmainfunctionisanalogical.Whatsfdoesmostproductively,accordingtoSuvin,isreflectontheproblemsofitsowntimeandplaceinawaythatdoesnotsimplypredictfutureeffectsfrompresentcauses,buttransformsourunderstandingofthepresentitself.Atcertainmoments,Suvingoesbeyondthehorizonofanalogyandgrantsthatsf’sanalogicaltendenciesindicate“anatleastinitialreadinessfornewnormsofreality,forthenovumofdealienatinghumanhistory”(84).Inthepastdecadeofsftheory,therehasbeenincreasingemphasisonthetransformative,utopianelementsthatcontributetoa“readinessfornewnorms.”InCriticalTheoryandScienceFiction(2000),CarlFreedmanhasarguedforsfasexplicitlypoliticalwritingthatdoesthesameworkascriticaltheoryandis“privilegedwithregardtocritiqueandutopia”(86),whileFredricJamesonhasofferedaviewofsfasaspeciesofnegativedialecticsinArchaeologiesoftheFuture:TheDesireCalledUtopiaandOtherScienceFictions(2005).Tothesewell-knownworksshouldbeaddedPinksy’sFuturePresent(2003),discussedabove,whichmediatesbetweenthematerialistemphasistypicalofmuchEuroamericansfcriticismandanethicsofOtherness.Whateverthedifferingtermsandemphasesofthesearguments,theyallshiftthegroundofdefinitionawayfromanalogyproper,andevenfurtherfromprediction/extrapolation,towardsfasanecessarilyutopiannarrativemodethatpointsbeyondwhatiscurrentlyknown(orcanbeaccuratelypredicted)toradicaldifferenceandthechallengesofencounteringorfosteringit. Thisemphasisinrecentsftheoryhasscarcelybanishedallinterestinpredic-tionorextrapolation;abidingcriticalinterestincyborgsandinthecategoryofthe“posthuman”haskeptthesesquarelyinview,thoughwithaneyetoradi-cal,possiblyutopiantransformationaswell.7Nevertheless,asecondinteresthasalsobecomeincreasinglystronginthelastdecade:sfasaformofculturethatservesasthenexusoffandom.8Thisinterestisnotnecessarilyantitheti-caltotheutopian,butitdoesraisetheverydifferentquestionofsfasasetofsharedandrecognizableconventions,whichconnectsftextstooneanotherandconnectcommunitiesofreadersandviewersaswell.Intherealmofsftheoryassuch,DamienBroderick’sReadingbyStarlight(1995)articulatestheapproachmostappropriatetothisquestion.Broderickseessfasdefinedbyawebofconventions,motifs,andthematics,a“mega-text”(xiii)thatmakessfworksinherentlyintertextual.Thisdefinitiondoesnotautomaticallyexcludeanyconsiderationoftheutopianaspectsofsf.Broderickisatsomepainstofinessehowsfconventionsoperate,andtoemphasizetheirtransformativeanddestabilizedqualities;hewishestoarguethatsf,atitsmostenergetic,canbe

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animatedbyitsconventionswithouttherebybeingconventional.9However,therewouldseemtobeanirreducibletensionbetweenanotionofsfdefinedbyitsopennesstodifferenceandanticipationofotherness,andanotiongroundedinthesamenessofsharedconventions,nomatterhowdynamicthoseconven-tionsmaybe. Decidedlyutopianbutnotstronglyintertextual,TheRoaddemandsthatweacknowledgethepossiblelimitationsofansf-as-cultureapproach.McCarthyisdeeplyfamiliarwithmanylandmarksoftheEuroamericanliterarycanonintowhichhehasbeenwelcomed,andhehasmadelittleattempttoconcealhisinfluences,onceremarkingthat“booksaremadeoutofotherbooks”(“Venom-ous”31).TheRoadisobviouslyintertextualinthisbroadsense,andinformedreaderswillbeabletoplacethenovelindialoguewithahostofearliertexts,nottomentionwithMcCarthy’sownwork.Inthemorenarrowlyscience-fictionalsense,however, thenovelproceedswithoutanecessaryor intrusivemega-textualapparatus.Whilereadersmayfeellessdisorientediftheyarefamiliarwithothersfnarrativesofapocalypse,thereisnoneedforsuchfamiliarity.McCarthywritestheapocalypseafresh,withminimalintertextualdialogue(thewife’smentionofhorrorfilmisoneofaveryfewreferencestopre-existingnarrativeconventions).Fromthesebeginnings,TheRoadtellsthestoryofa“readinessfornewnorms”(Suvin84)emergingintheboy’sconsciousnessthroughhisfather’snurture.Thefactthattheboy’sexpectationispromptedby“oldstoriesofcourageandjustice”(41)presentsuswithachoice.Ifacon-nectiontothe“mega-text”isnecessaryforsf,thenitispossibletosaythatMcCarthyispoachingonparaliteraryterritoryusingtheconservativethematicsofadventurenarratives,ortheelevatedstyleofhigh-literarywriting,orboth.Itismorefruitful,Ibelieve,tosaythatTheRoadstandsorfallsasanimportantsfnovelregardlessofitsindifferencetoexistingconventions.Infact,Iseeitasanovelthatsucceedsassfpartlybecauseofitsindifference.Thefactthatthefatherspurshisson’sutopianexpectationsthroughtraditionalstoriesthatwouldseem,inthemselves,tohavenoparticularlyutopian(orscience-fictional)contentonlystrengthensthedynamicqualityof thefather-sonrelationship,andtheradicalwayvaluesaretransformedfromonegenerationtothenext.Theman’sbeliefs, intendedtocounterbalancethedestructionof theworld,mustthemselvesbedestroyed—atleastinthelimitedformsthroughwhichthefatherunderstandsthem—inordertoreachfulfillment,andthisdynamicofdestructionandfulfillmentunfoldsinthenovelitselfwithouttheadvantagesorimpairmentsofprecedent. AsmuchasTheRoadfrustratesabeliefthatsfisperforceintertextual,italsodisruptskeyassumptionsincriticismofMcCarthy’spreviouswork.Asweknowfromaninterviewgivenin2005,McCarthyhasanumberofunpublished

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manuscriptsnearcompletion,andheclaimsthattheirorderofreleasehasnothematicdesign;thisshouldchastenanyclaimthatTheRoadbyitselfindicatescommitment to a newdirection (“CormacCountry” 104).Nevertheless, toapproachTheRoadfromtheangleIamsuggestingistodepartfromacriticalconsensusaboutthecategoryofhistoryinMcCarthy’swork.TheconsensushasbeenpartlyobscuredbytwointermittentdebatesconcerningMcCarthy’sorientationasawriter.First,thereisthequestionofphilosophy:isMcCarthyahistoricallyinformedwriterwhoconceivesofhumanityintemporallyandculturallyspecificterms,orauniversalist,committedtoatranshistoricalgraspofhumannature?Second, there is thequestionofpurpose:doesMcCarthyconceiveofhisworkas redemptive,capableofameliorating the illsof theworld,orishemerelyanablebutdisinterestedhistorian?Despitethesepointsofcontention,thereisageneralcriticalassumptionthathistoryanddesolationarelinkedforMcCarthy.Whetheritshapeshumannatureormerelyprovidescircumstancesforitsexpression—andwhetherMcCarthywritesredemptivelyorotherwise—historyisalmostalwaysassumedtobringbadnews,eitherthedestructionofspecificformsofvaluebyworseformsorsimplythecancella-tionofvaluealtogether.InthestandardcriticalviewofMcCarthy,historicalexperiencecauseshumanitytobecruellytornfromitsinnocence,drainedofitsstrength,misledintoindulgingitsworstimpulses,orsimplygivenvariousopportunitiestodiscoveritsisolation,insignificanceoriniquity.10

Onepowerful recent articulation of this consensus isCormacMcCarthyandtheMythofAmericanExceptionalism(2008),inwhichJohnCantargues:“McCarthydeliberatelysetsouttogivehistextsmythicformand...hedoessoinsuchawayastopointoutthedestructiveconsequencesofstructuringtheconsciousnessofindividualsbymeansofpowerfulmythologieswhichtheyarenotinapositiontoliveout”(9).Thisargumentmightwellbeagestureofcriticalreconciliation.ForCant,McCarthyisbothaculturaluniversalistwhobelievesinatranshistoricalhumannaturecontainingthepotentialforgoodandevil,andahistoricistwhoseesspecificculturaldevelopmentsaseithercausingorfail-ingtopreventspecifichistoricalwrongs.Heis,likewise,bothamythographerandadeconstructorofmyth.ThoughIamnotpreparedtodifferwithCantasregardsMcCarthy’sworkingeneral,IdofindthisapproachinadequatetoTheRoad.Cantstressesthevirtueandnobilityofboththefatherandtheson,whorepresent“theinherentvitalityoftheardenthearted”(270),andtheworthless-nessofabroaderculturethathasdestroyeditself,oratleasthasbeenunabletopreventitsowndestruction.11Butdespitethestarkrealitiesofitsapocalypticscenario,TheRoadultimatelyrejectssuchbinariesasinnocenceandtheFall,vitalityandenervation,mythand itsdeconstruction.The father-son relation-shipisnotasinnocentorasclosedasCantsuggests;itneithertranscendsmyth

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norisdestroyedbyit.BorrowingCant’slanguage,Iwouldarguethattheman“structur[es]theconsciousnessof[theboy]bymeansofpowerfulmythologieswhich[heis]notinapositiontoliveout.”Theman’steaching,however,doesnothave“destructiveconsequences”intheexpectedsense.Theboyabsorbsandre-formshisfather’smythsashestepsintoanewhistory. WhattheboytakesfromthefatheriswhatreadersmighttakefromTheRoad:acommitmenttobroaderethicalhorizonsandahope,howeverfraught,thatthefuturewillbringnewformsofcareandcommunity.Itisunfortunatethattheman—forMcCarthyavehicleoftransformationwithinhistory—hasbecomesimplythemeasure,adequateornot,ofnarrativeandhumanpossibil-ity.ItislikewiseunfortunatethatTheRoadisreadasterminatingdiscussionofhistoricaltransformationwhenitgivesformtomoreutopianaspirationthananyofMcCarthy’spreviousworks. Isuggest,finally, thatmanycriticsandreadersenergeticallysubscribetoadecidedlyliteraryandhumanisticreadingofTheRoadnotbecauseitisn’tsf,butpreciselybecauseitis,andinawaythatdemandsbothathinking-throughandathinking-beyondthecategoriesofvalueassociatedwithacceptedliterarycanons.Atthesametime,thenovelusefullydisruptsanoverlynarrowsenseofwhatcountsassf.Itbypassesconsciousorovertconversationwiththetraditionofsf,anditoffersusaninstanceofutopiananticipationrootedin(yetmovingawayfrom)moretraditionalnarra-tives.Sfhascontinuallystruggledwithitslinkstovariouspre-existinggenericconventions, fromtheadventure-romancemodelsunderpinningmuchearlymagazinefictiontothehard-boiledclichésthatcharacterizedtheachievementsofcyberpunk.InTheRoad,wehaveansfnarrativethatembracesandfore-groundsthisproblem,bothatthemicro-levelofthetwocentralcharactersandatthemacro-levelofthenarrativeasawhole.Thenovelenactstheemergenceoftheutopianthroughwhatinitiallyappearstobeaconservativeexerciseinbomb-shelter ethics.What should strike us aswondrous aboutMcCarthy’sstoryoffatherandsonisnotthecapacityofindividualstobegoodinabadworld,ortochoosegoodmythsoverbadones,butthepossibilitythatutopianenergiescanarisefromlimitedformsofgood.Thisreadingusefullychastensasenseofsfasaclosedenterprise,practicedbyspecialistsincodedlanguagetotheexclusionofuntutoredoutsiders.ThefailureofsfcriticstoseizeTheRoadasasignificantinstanceofutopianwritingsuggeststhattheproblemofexclusivityoperatingbetweensfand“literature”has,atlast,beguntoworkinbothdirections.Inhis1996essay“ScienceFictionandtheQuestionoftheCanon,”CarlFreedmanwas right toobserve that “Thedangerwill alwaysexistthatsciencefictioncanonizingmayrepressmuchthatisgenuinelynewandcriticalwithinandbeyondthegenre”(119).Thatakeyinstanceofthisrepression is itself concernedwith the dangers of exclusionmight sharpen

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ourdesiretokeepsfcriticismopentothearrivalofvaluablenewnarratives,whatevertheirorigins.

Notes

1. IwouldliketothankChannetteRomeroandAidanWasleyfortheirinvaluablesuggestions.ThanksalsotoDaleKnickerbockerforgenerouseditorialsupport.

2. Itisimportanttonotealong-termshiftofprioritiestowardthecategoryoftimewithinsciencefictionasawholesincetheearlymodernperiod;seeSuvin72-75.However,anincreasingsensethattemporalcategoriesarecrucialtoutopiacanalsobeobservedinrecentdecades.SeeforinstanceJameson’sArchaeologiesoftheFuture:TheDesireCalledUtopiaandOtherEssays,inwhichthenewmaterialcomprisingthefirsthalfofthetextismuchmoretemporallyorientedinitsconcep-tionofutopiathantheearliermaterialcollectedinthelatterhalf.CarlFreedman’sarticulationofBlochian“hermeneutic”utopianismislikewisestronglyinflectedtowards the temporal;seeCriticalTheoryandScienceFiction63-86.SeealsomydiscussionofPinskybelow.Foracontemporarytreatmentofutopianismthatgivesmoreorlessbalancedattentiontobothspaceandtime,seeWegner.

3. Forageneraldiscussionofsfaestheticsofscale,seeRoberts54-59.Foranadmir-ablycomprehensivetreatmentofsfandthesublime,seeCsicsery-Ronaychapter5.

4. ForPinsky’selaborationsoftheseconcepts,seechapters1,2and8.

5. TheviewIamsuggesting,promptedbyPinsky’sunderstandingofsf,offersamuchdifferentsenseofTheRoad’sethicalschemethanthatsuggestedbytwopreviouscritics.ThroughaprescriptiveuseofSchopenhauerianethics,EuanGallivanshedsalargelypositivelightonthefatherandascepticallightonthenovel’sconclu-sion,contractingitsethicalhorizons.PhilipSnyder’sreadingofTheRoad,likemyown,considersitsrelationtoaLevinasianethicsoftheOther.However,SnyderavoidswhatIbelieveisMcCarthy’sradicalcritiqueofthefather.ForSnyder,thesonhimselfisthechieffocusoftheman’sethicalobligations,“thesourceofthefather’smostessentialandinfinitecalltoresponsibility”(75).Snyderdoesnotmakeclearhowthebiologicalbond,theonethemanfeelsmostnaturallytotheexclusionofallothers,alsooccupiesthespaceofOtherness.Itisworthnotingthatinhiscatalogueofencountersbetweenthetwoprotagonistsandothercharacters,Snyderleavesouttheson’ssightingoftheotherboy—anomissionwhichdisturb-inglyrepeatsthefather’sowndiscountingoftheson’svalues.

6. TherecentfilmadaptationofTheRoad,directedbyJohnHillcoat,providesause-fulcontrastwiththeintergenerationalstorythenoveldevelops.Placingthefilmandthenovelside-by-side,weseeimmediatelythatMcCarthypossessesstylistictoolsasawriterforwhichHillcoatpossessesnocounterparts.Inparticular,theseamlessnessofMcCarthy’sprose,itspowertostrikeandsustainparticularnarra-tivenotes,contrastssharplywiththejump-cutsinHillcoat’srendering.BasedonthisfilmandhisearlierfeatureTheProposition,itwouldseemthatHillcoatdoesnotencouragehiscinematographerstoshootfortheeditingroom,and(inaddition

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tocreatingachoppynarrativequalityaboutwhichsomecriticshavecomplained)thisreducesthefilm’scapacitytoconnectchangesinthefather-sonrelationshipto identifiable causes and effects.Three other elementsmove the film furtherfrom the novel’s view of intergenerational conflict. First, andmost obviously,thekeyexchangeinwhichtheboypointsoutthedifferencebetweenthefather’sstoriesandthefather’sactionsisexcised,obscuringasensethattheson’sdesiretofindtheboy,andtobewithother“goodguys,”stemsfromtheteachingsandstoriesofhisfather.Second,ViggoMortensen’sportrayalofthefatherconveysanemotional instability,occasionallyvergingonhysteria, thatunderscoreshisuntrustworthiness;itisdifficulttoimaginehimasatellerofconvincingstories.Third,thereisaslightbutsignificantchangeintheson’sage.Thenovelmakesclearthattheboyisundertenyearsold,andhismistrustinhisfatherisclearlyaneffectofhisearliertrust.Inthefilm,theboyisslightlyolder,adolescentoronthevergeofadolescence,andthismakesitpossibletoseehisconflictswithhisfatherasresultofhisage,orevenasadifferenceofpersonalityorcharacter.Theeffectofthesechangesistounbalancetheman’sroleintheboy’sdevelopment,neutralizing thesubtledynamicwherebythefather’sstoriesmotivaterebellioninhissonpreciselybecausehebelievesthem.Turningfromthefilmbacktothenovel,wegainarenewedsenseofthecomplexityofitsdesign,andoftheutopianvectorofitsintergenerationalnarrative.

7. SeeforexampleBukatman(1993),Hayles(1999),Foster(2005)andClarke(2008).

8. Historiesofsffandomarenotnew;seeMoskowitz(1954)andWarner(1969and1976).However,thepasttwentyyearshavecertainlyseenanincreaseincriticalacademicstudiesofsffandom,alongwithstudiesoffandomasawholethatgivesignificantattentiontosffandominparticular.ForasamplingseeJenkins(1992)chapter6,thevolumeeditedbySanders(1994),MacDonald(1998),Bacon-Smith(2000),andBury(2005)chapters1and2.

9. ForBroderick’sdiscussionofsfconventionsee19-20,57-63.

10. TwofiguresdifferingsharplyfromthetypicalviewofhistoryinMcCarthy’sworkarePhillips(1996)andParkes(2002).IvalueParkes,inparticular,forhisinsist-enceontheperformativeaspectsofMcCarthy’sBloodMeridian,whichsuggestthat“thescriptofAmericanhistoryremainsopentorewriting”(120).

11. Cant’suseoftheterm“ardenthearted”isderivedfromMcCarthyhimself;seeAllthePrettyHorses6.

Works Cited

Bacon-Smith,Camille.ScienceFictionCulture.Philadelphia:UofPennsylvaniaP,2000.Print.

Broderick,Damien.Reading by Starlight: Postmodern Science Fiction. London:Routledge,1995.Print.

Bukatman,Scott.TerminalIdentity:TheVirtualSubjectinPostmodernScienceFiction.Durham,NC:DukeUP,1993.Print.

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Bury,Rhiannon.Cyberspaces of TheirOwn:FemaleFandomsOnline.NewYork:PeterLang,2005.Print.

Cant, John.CormacMcCarthyand theMythofAmericanExceptionalism.London:Routledge,2008.Print.

Chabon,Michael.“AftertheApocalypse.”Rev.ofTheRoad,byCormacMcCarthy.TheNewYorkReviewofBooks54.2(2007):24–26.Print.

Clarke,Bruce.PosthumanMetamorphoses:NarrativeandSystems.NewYork:Ford-hamUP,2008.Print.

Csicsery-Ronay, Istvan.The SevenBeauties of Science Fiction.Middletown,CT:WesleyanUP,2008.Print.

Delany,Samuel.Nova.NewYork:Doubleday,1968.Print.

Foster,Thomas.TheSoulsofCyberfolk:PosthumanismasVernacularTheory.Min-neapolis:UofMinnesotaP,2005.Print.

Freedman,Carl.Critical Theory and ScienceFiction.Hanover,CT:WesleyanUP,2000.Print.

———.“ScienceFictionandtheQuestionoftheCanon.”ScienceFictionandMarketRealities.Ed.GaryWestfahl,GeorgeSlusser,andEricS.Rabkin.Athens,GA:UofGeorgiaP,1996.111–121.Print.

Gallivan,Euan.“CompassionateMcCarthy?:TheRoadandSchopenhauerianEthics.”TheCormacMcCarthyJournal6(2008):98–106.Print.

Hayles,N.Katherine.HowWeBecamePosthuman:VirtualBodies inCybernetics,LiteratureandInformatics.Chicago:ChicagoUP,1999.Print.

Jameson,Fredric.ArchaeologiesoftheFuture:TheDesireCalledUtopiaandOtherScienceFictions.London:Verso,2005.Print.

Jenkins,Henry.TextualPoachers:TelevisionFans&ParticipatoryCulture.London:Routledge,1992.Print.

Kunkel,Benjamin.“DystopiaandtheEndofPolitics.”Dissent55.4(2008):89–98.Print.

MacDonald,Andrea.“UncertainUtopia:ScienceFictionMediaFandom&ComputerMediatedCommunication.”TheorizingFandom:Fans,SubcultureandIdentity.Ed.CherylHarrisandAlisonAlexander.Cresskill,NJ:Hampton,1998.131–152.Print.

McCarthy,Cormac.AllthePrettyHorses.1992.NewYork:Vintage,1993.Print.

———.“CormacCountry.”InterviewbyRichardB.Woodward.VanityFairAugust2005:98–104.Print.

———.“CormacMcCarthy’sVenomousFictions.”InterviewbyRichardB.Woodward.TheNewYorkTimes19Apr.1992:SM28+.Print.

———.TheRoad.2006.NewYork:Vintage,2007.Print.

Moskowitz,Sam.TheImmortalStorm:AHistoryofScienceFictionFandom.Westport,CT:Hyperion,1954.Print.

Parkes,Adam.“History,Bloodshed,andtheSpectacleofAmericanIdentityinBloodMeridian.”CormacMcCarthy:NewDirections.Ed.JamesD.Lilley.Albuquerque:UofNewMexicoPress,2002.Print.

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Phillips,Dana.“HistoryandtheUglyFactsofCormacMcCarthy’sBloodMeridian.”AmericanLiterature68.2(1996):433–460.Print.

Pinsky,Michael.FuturePresent:Ethicsand/asScienceFiction.Madison,NJ:FarleighDickinsonUP,2003.Print.

TheProposition.Dir.JohnHillcoat.Perf.GuyPierce.FirstLookPictures,2005.Film.

Roberts,Adam.ScienceFiction.2nded.London:Routledge,2006.Print.

TheRoad.Dir.JohnHillcoat.Perf.ViggoMortensen.Dimension,2009.Film.

Sanders,Joe,ed.ScienceFictionFandom.Westport,CT:Greenwood,1994.Print.

Snyder,Philip.“HospitalityinCormacMcCarthy’sTheRoad.”TheCormacMcCarthyJournal6(2008):69–86.Print.

Sobchack,Vivian.ScreeningSpace:TheAmericanScienceFictionFilm.2nded.NewBrunswick:RutgersUP,1987.Print.

Suvin,Darko.MetamorphosesofScienceFiction:On thePoeticsandHistoryofaLiteraryGenre.NewHaven:YaleUP,1979.Print.

Villalon,Oscar.“InaTimeofWarandTrickery—TheYear’sBestBooks.”Sfgate.SanFranciscoChronicle,17Dec.2006.Web.07Jan.2010.

Warner,HarryJr.AllOurYesterdays:AnInformalHistoryofScienceFictionFandomintheForties.Chicago:Advent,1969.Print.

——.AWealthofFable:AnInformalHistoryofScienceFictionFandominthe1950s.VanNuys,CA:SCIFIPress,1976.Print.

Wegner,PhillipE.ImaginaryCommunities:Utopia,theNationandtheSpatialHistoriesofModernity.Berkeley:UofCaliforniaP,2002.Print.

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Contributors

344

Christopher Pizzino isanAssistantProfessorofEnglishat theUniversityofGeorgia,where he teaches comics, science fiction and contemporaryAmericanliterature.HeiscurrentlyworkingonabookentitledArrestedDevelopment:ComicsattheBoundariesofLiterature.

Jessie Stickgold-Sarah isadoctoralcandidateinthedepartmentofEnglishandAmericanLiteratureatBrandeisUniversity.Sheiscompletingadissertationongeneticsinpost-DNAAmericanliterature.ShehastaughtliteratureandwritinginboththeEnglishandBiologydepartments,andisthedirectoroftheBrandeisWritingCenter.

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