Writing on Contemporary Issues: Imagining the Future

Computer-generated image of a large cyborg head floating in a cylindrical chamber in a futuristic laboratory.

"Think Tank." Original artwork. (Image courtesy of Laurent Alquier. Used with permission.)

Instructor(s)

MIT Course Number

21W.730-5

As Taught In

Fall 2007

Level

Undergraduate

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Course Features

Course Description

Turn-of-the-century eras have historically been times when people are more than usually inclined to scrutinize the present and speculate about the future. Now, the turn not just of a century but of a millennium having recently passed, such scrutiny and speculations inevitably intensify. What will the future that awaits us in this twenty-first century and beyond be like? And how do visions of that future reflect and respond to the world we live in now? In this course we will read and write about how some writers and filmmakers have responded to the present as a way of imagining—and warning about—possible worlds to come. Guided by our reading and discussion, we will scrutinize our own present and construct our own visions of the future through close readings of the texts as well as of some aspects of contemporary culture—urban and environmental crises, economic imperialism, sexual and reproductive politics, the ethics of biotechnologies, issues of race and gender, the romance of technology, robotics and cyborg cultures, media saturation, language and representation—and the persistent questions they pose about what it means to be human at this start of a new millennium.

Faery, Rebecca. 21W.730-5 Writing on Contemporary Issues: Imagining the Future, Fall 2007. (MIT OpenCourseWare: Massachusetts Institute of Technology), http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/writing-and-humanistic-studies/21w-730-5-writing-on-contemporary-issues-imagining-the-future-fall-2007 (Accessed). License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA


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