Transrealism: the first major literary movement of the 21st century?

Its not science fiction, its not realism, but hovers in the unsettling zone in between. From Philip K Dick to Stephen King, Damien Walter takes a tour through transrealism, the emerging genre aiming to kill off consensus reality

A Scanner Darkly is one of Philip K Dicks most famous but also most divisive novels. Written in 1973 but not published until 1977, it marks the boundary between PKDs mid-career novels that were clearly works of science fiction, including The Man in the High Castle and Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, and his late-career work that had arguably left that genre behind. Like VALIS and The Divine Invasion that followed it, A Scanner Darkly was two stories collided into one a roughly science-fictional premise built around a mind-destroying drug, and a grittily realistic autobiographical depiction of PKDs time living among drug addicts.

It is also, in the thinking of writer, critic and mathematician Rudy Rucker, the first work of a literary movement he would name transrealism in his 1983 essay A Transrealist Manifesto. Three decades later, Ruckers essay has as much relevance to contemporary literature as ever. But while Rucker was writing at a time when science fiction and mainstream literature appeared starkly divided, today the two are increasingly hard to separate. It seems that here in the early 21st century, the literary movement Rucker called for is finally reaching its fruition.

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Published on October 24, 2014 00:30
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