Applying Jean Baudrillard’s question ‘What are you doing after the orgy?’ to the postmillennial climate that informs our contemporary cultural moment, this book argues that the imagination of apocalyptic endings has been an obsessive theme in post-Enlightenment culture. Dominic Pettman identifies and examines the dynamic tensions of various apocalyptic discourses, from the fin-de-siècle decadents of the 1890s to the fin-de-millènnium cyberpunks of the 1990s, in order to highlight the complex constellation of exhaustion, anticipation, panic, and ecstasy in contemporary culture. Through analyses of rapturous cults, cyberpunk literature, post-apocalyptic cinema, techno-paganism, death fashion, and the Y2K prophecy, After the Orgy explores why the twentieth century swung so violently between the poles of anticipation and anticlimax. In the process, the book raises pressing questions concerning the relevance of such ideas in our new millennium and points out alternatives to the monotonous horror of traditional narratives.
Inhoudsopgave
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: After the Orgy
The Dating Game
The Coming of the Lord
Technological Revelation
A Note on Methodology
1. Panic Merchants: Prophecy and the Satyr
The Goat in the Machine
2. The Rapture of Rupture
Sade and the Death of God
Avoiding the Void
Eroticism and the Thanatic Asymptote
Nietzsche’s Dionysus
Nihilism and the Thirst for Annihilation
3. The Virtual Apocalypse
Virilio’s Accident
Bacchanical Man and Ballard’s Crash
Technol-orgy: From Autogeddon to Infocalypse
Snow Crash and Scopophilia
Cyborgies in the Dionysian Landscape
Carmageddon
4. Decaying Forward: Satiety and Society
De-fragging the Self
Technologies of the Flesh
5. Cosmic Architects
Immaculate Contraception
Sexless Hydrogen: The Frisson of Fission
Dionysus in ‘69
The Politics of Play
6. Playing at Catastrophe
Prêt-à-Mort: Necrophilia and Death Fashion
Close Encounters of the Third Kind: The Joachite Structure of Baudrillard’s Philosophy
‘A Biocybernetic Self-Fulfilling Prophecy World Orgy I’: or Surviving the Necropolis
Temporary Autonomous Zones and the Archaic Revival
Civilization and Its Discotheques
After the Orgy (But Before the Test Results)
Conclusion: The Revelation Will not be Televised
Y2Care: Debugging the Millennium
The Owl of Minerva Versus the Millennium Falcon
Means to an End
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Over de auteur
Dominic Pettman is Assistant Professor of New Media at the University of Amsterdam.