Philip K. Dick Criticism 1982-2010
Philip K. Dick Criticism 1982-2010
Philip K. Dick Criticism 1982-2010
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English and American Studies (HJEAS)
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in the texture of American culture in the second half of the twentieth
century. As Eric Carl Link frames Dick's influence, "To read the work of
Philip K. Dick is not only to read of the future, but also to read a version of
the history of U.S. culture throughout the entire cold war era" (9-10). Dick's
central themes - the elusive nature of reality, the uncertain boundaries
between the human and the artificial, and the invasion of simulacra and
counterfeits into the substance of life - are not just political, but existential
in nature. Given this fact, and the imaginative and intellectual energy of his
writing, the considerable critical attention given to Dick, most notably his
science fiction, is understandable.
First, a few words on chronological and generic matters appear in
order. Regarding chronology, this review, with the exception of several
important articles appearing in 1975, will cover scholarship from 1982 to
2010. 1982 is a convenient starting point for two reasons. First, it is the year
of Dick's death, thus making the materials covered here almost entirely
posthumous, and, second, it is also the date of the release of Bladerunner ; by
far the most influential film based on Dick's writings, which can be seen to
mark the beginning of the wider cultural diffusion of Dick's influence. I will
focus on Dick's science fiction rather than on his earlier realistic novels,
essays, and philosophical works (except as they enter into critical analysis of
his science fiction), or the films based on Dick's science fiction that have a
less direct relation to his written work itself.
Several previous reviews of Dick criticism both merit attention in
themselves and also mark its progress, growth, and possible saturation
point. In 1984, in "The Transmigration of Philip K. Dick," Carl Feckete
criticizes the lack of new publications among the eleven selections in Joseph
Olander and Martin H. Greenberg's Philip K Dick and the lack of original
scholarship in that publication as well as in Hazel Pierce's 1984 Philip K
Dick. He calls for a better understanding of aesthetic issues in Dick
scholarship and criticizes what he terms its "content fetishism," regretting
that at that point, Dick had "only very slowly been attracting energetic and
Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies 19.2. 2013. Copyright © 2013
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Both Dick's life and his writing provide material for psychological
readings of his work. His childhood traumas, his agoraphobia, his drug use,
his unstable marital relationships, his interest in existential psychologists
such as Rollo May and Ludwig Binswanger, and the extensive depiction of
altered and abnormal mental states in his fiction are a matter of record.
Lawrence Sutin's and Greg Rickman's biographies of Dick and Dick's own
comments on his psychological history are clear sources for such studies.
Rickman is particularly interested in Dick's personal and psychological
history. In "The Nature of Dick's Fantasies," a review of Lawrence Sutin's
edition of Dicks Exegesis and of Paul Williams's edited letters of Dick,
Rickman criticizes what he considers the neglect of "the psychological
context" of Dick's visionary ideas (277). In this review and elsewhere, he
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Butler, Andrew M. "Legit Dick." Science Fiction Studies 35.3 (2008): 485-91.
Print.
Dick, Philip K. The Collected Stories of Philip K Dick. 5 vols. Los Angeles:
Underwood Miller, 1987. Print.
318
Print.
319
121-30. Print.
Kucukalic, Lejia: Philip K Dick: Canonical Writer of the Digital Age. New York:
Routledge, 1992. Print.
Lem, Stanislaw. "Philip K. Dick: A Visionary among the Charlatans." Science
Fiction Studies 2 (1975): 54-67. Print.
Mackey, Douglas A. Philip K Dick. Boston: Twayne, 1988. Print
20. Print.
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Print.
Slusser, George. "History, Historicity, Story." Science Fiction Studies 15.2 (July
1998): 187-213. Print.
Stilling, Roger J. "Mystical Healing: Reading Philip K. Dick's VALIS and
The Divine Invasion as Metapsychoanalytic Novels." South Atlantic
Revieiv26.2 (May 1991): 91-106. Print.
Sutin, Lawrence. Dittine Invasions: A Life of Philip K Dick. New York:
Harmony, 1989. Print.
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