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The Cliffs Of Moher, Megan M. Mishler
The Cliffs Of Moher, Megan M. Mishler
TYGR: Student Art and Literary Magazine 2018-present
No abstract provided.
Entire Issue, Kyra E. Blair, Rachel Sedgwick
Entire Issue, Kyra E. Blair, Rachel Sedgwick
TYGR: Student Art and Literary Magazine 2018-present
No abstract provided.
The Psychology Of Dystopian And Post-Apocalyptic Stories: The Proverbial Question Of Whether Life Will Imitate Art, Donna Roberts
The Psychology Of Dystopian And Post-Apocalyptic Stories: The Proverbial Question Of Whether Life Will Imitate Art, Donna Roberts
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
Dystopian and Post-Apocalyptic genres challenge our notions of Aristotelian mimesis vs Anti-mimesis – i.e., In the study of the human condition, does life imitate art or art imitate life? Popular culture, then and now, provides us with examples to depict the circularity of these notions and the psychological importance of exploring this aspect of human nature, particularly the contemplation of our own collective demise. While we recoil in horror at the images these genres portray, we are also morbidly fascinated by them, and we can’t help but ask ourselves . . . Could that really happen? Will that happen?
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