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Title The Man in the high castle and philosophy : subversive reports from another reality / edited by Bruce Krajewski and Joshua Heter
Published Chicago : Open Court, [2017]
ß2017

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Description 1 online resource (vii, 260 pages)
Series Popular culture and philosophy ; volume 111
Popular culture and philosophy ; v. 111.
Contents I. Now wait for last season -- Juliana in Plato's cave -- Say Heil! to architecture -- Saving Hitler's life -- II. The world Dick made -- Cruel optimism and the good Nazi life -- In the neutral zone, a libertarian's home is their (high) castle -- The self-willed and ignorant law -- What if your hero is a fascist? -- III. Captives of unchance -- Is it free will if you pay for it? -- Could the Axis have won the war? -- Defying fate -- IV. Flow my tears, the ethicist said -- Is resistance to fascism terrorism? -- Are we really sure they're wrong? -- But why is our world better? -- Reel lucky -- V.A maze of what-ifs -- Farts, butterflies, and inner truth -- How close is that world to our world? -- When worlds diverge -- VI. A video darkly -- How to deal with reality when we're not built to -- What if evil had won? -- The spirit of abstraction -- After death it can get worse
Summary The Man in the High Castle is an Amazon TV show, based on the Philip K. Dick novel, about an "alternate present" (beginning in the 1960s) in which Germany and Japan won World War II, with the former Western US occupied by Japan, the former Eastern US occupied by Nazi Germany, and a small "neutral zone" between them. A theme of the story is that in this alternative world there is eager speculation, fueled by the illicit newsreel, The Grasshopper Lies Heavy, about how the world would have been different if America had won the war. In The Man in the High Castle and Philosophy, twenty-two professional thinkers look at philosophical issues raised by this ongoing enterprise in "alternative history." One question is whether it really made a profound difference that the Allies won the war, and exactly what differences in everyday life we may expect to arise from an apparent historical turning point. Could it be that some dramatic historical events have only superficial consequences, whil
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 243-248) and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Dick, Philip K. Man in the high castle.
SUBJECT Man in the high castle (Television program) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2015162175
Man in the high castle (Dick, Philip K.) fast
Subject Fascism in literature.
LITERARY CRITICISM -- American -- General.
Fascism in literature
Form Electronic book
Author Krajewski, Bruce, 1959- editor.
Heter, Joshua, editor.
ISBN 0812699688
9780812699685