Philip K. Dick
Studies in Major Literary Authors
WILLIAM E. CAIN,General Editor
For a full list of titles in this series, please visitwww.routledge.com
Melville's Monumental Imagination
Ian S. Maloney
Writing "Out of All the Camps"
J.M. Coetzee's Narratives of Displacement
Laura Wright
Here and Now
The Politics of Social Space in D. H. Lawrence and Virginia Woolf
Youngjoo Son
"Unnoticed in the Casual Light of Day"
Philip Larkin and the Plain Style
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Queer Times
Christopher Isherwood's Modernity
Jamie M. Carr
Edith Wharton's "Evolutionary Conception"
Darwinian Allegory in Her Major Novels
Paul J. Ohler
The End of Learning
Milton and Education
Thomas Festa
Reading and Mapping Hardy's Roads
Scott Rode
Creating Yoknapatawpha
Readers and Writers in Faulkner's Fiction
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No Place for Home
Spatial Constraint and Character Flight in the Novels of Cormac McCarthy
Jay Ellis
The Machine that Sings
Modernism, Hart Crane, and the Culture of the Body
Gordon A. Tapper
Influential Ghosts
A Study of Auden's Sources
Rachel Wetzsteon
D.H. Lawrence's Border Crossing
Colonialism in His Travel Writings and "Leadership" Novels
Eunyoung Oh
Dorothy Wordsworth's Ecology
Kenneth R. Cervelli
Sports, Narrative, and Nation in the Fiction of F. Scott Fitzgerald
Jarom Lyle McDonald
Shelley's Intellectual System and its Epicurean Background
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Modernist Aesthetics and Consumer Culture in the Writings of Oscar Wilde
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Milton's Uncertain Eden
Understanding Place in Paradise Lost
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Henry Miller and Religion
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The Magic Lantern
Representation of the Double in Dickens
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The Environmental Unconscious in the Fiction of Don DeLillo
Elise A. Martucci
James Merrill
Knowing Innocence
Reena Sastri
Yeats and Theosophy
Ken Monteith
Pynchon and the Political
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Paul Auster's Postmodernity
Brendan Martin
Editing Emily Dickinson
The Production of an Author
Lena Christensen
Cormac McCarthy and the Myth of American Exceptionalism
John Cant
Our Scene is London
Ben Jonson's City and the Space of the Author
James D. Mardock
Poetic Language and Political Engagement in the Poetry of Keats
Jack Siler
Politics and Aesthetics in
The Diary of Virginia Woolf
Joanne Campbell Tidwell
Homosexuality in the Life and Work of Joseph Conrad
Love Between the Lines
Richard J. Ruppel
Shakespeare in the Victorian Periodicals
Kathryn Prince
Shakespeare and the Economic Imperative
"What's aught but as 'tis valued?"
Peter F. Grav
Wallace Stevens and the Realities of Poetic Language
Stefan Holander
Milton and the Spiritual Reader
Reading and Religion in Seventeenth-Century England
David Ainsworth
Everybody's America
Thomas Pynchon, Race, and the Cultures of Postmodernism
David Witzling
Dickens, Journalism, and Nationhood
Mapping the World in Household Words
Sabine Clemm
Narrative Conventions and Race in the Novels of Toni Morrison
Jennifer Lee Jordan Heinert
Philip K. Dick
Canonical Writer of the Digital Age
Lejla Kucukalic
Philip K. Dick
Canonical Writer of the Digital Age
Lejla Kucukalic
New York London
First published 2009
by Routledge
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Simultaneously published in the UK
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Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Kucukalic, Lejla.
Philip K. Dick : canonical writer of the digital age / by Lejla Kucukalic.
p. cm. (Studies in major literary authors)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-415-96242-1 (acid-free paper)
1. Dick, Philip K.Criticism and interpretation. 2. Science fiction, American
History and criticism. I. Title.
PS3554.I3Z74 2009
813.54dc22
2008023501
ISBN 0-203-88684-4 Master e-book ISBN
ISBN10: 0-415-96242-0 (hbk)
ISBN10: 0-203-88684-4 (ebk)
ISBN13: 978-0-415-96242-1 (hbk)
ISBN13: 978-0-203-88684-7 (ebk)
Copyright 2007/2008 Mobipocket.com. All rights reserved.
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Contents
Acknowledgments
I am an avid reader of acknowledgments, even in books whose contents I only briefly scan. There is something attractive and satisfying in discovering the variety of ways in which authors express their thanks; these brief statements give the author a chance to break out of their solitude and acknowledge the collective that supported them. So it is with pleasure that I express my own thanks.
My gratitude goes to the wonderful group of scholars, editors, librarians, friends, and family who have nurtured my work on this book and made it possible. My advisor and role model, Professor J.A. Leo Lemay, shared with me his vast knowledge of American Literature and of writing while I was working on my doctorate, the basis for this book. My other valuable reader, Professor Lois Potter, ventured graciously into the curious subject of science fiction and my even more curious treatment of it, and stayed there with me, patiently providing her comments; Susan Goodman and Richard Doyle offered their time and expertise to the initial project. To this list of scholars I must add Darko Suvin, as I am grateful to him for looking at some very early drafts of my work and encouraging me to continue.
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