ABSTRACT

From The Brothers Karamazov to Star Trek to Twin Peaks, this collection explores a variety of different imaginary worlds both historic and contemporary.

Featuring contributions from an interdisciplinary and international group of scholars, each essay looks at a particular imaginary world in-depth, and world-building issues associated with that world. Together, the essays explore the relationship between the worlds and the media in which they appear as they examine imaginary worlds in literature, television, film, computer games, and theatre, with many existing across multiple media simultaneously. The book argues that the media incarnation of a world affects world structure and poses unique obstacles to the act of world-building. The worlds discussed include Nazar, Barsetshire, Skotopogonievsk, the Vorkosigan Universe, Grover’s Corners, Gormenghast, Collinsport, Daventry, Dune, the Death Gate Cycle universe, Twin Peaks, and the Star Trek galaxy.

A follow-up to Mark J. P. Wolf ’s field-defining book Building Imaginary Worlds, this collection will be of critical interest to students and scholars of popular culture, subcreation studies, transmedia studies, literature, and beyond.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

part |78 pages

Worlds of Words

chapter 1|14 pages

The Journey of Niels Klim to the World Underground by Ludvig Holberg

Subcreation and Social Criticism

chapter 2|19 pages

‘A Little Bit of England Which I Have Myself Created’

Creating Barsetshire across Forms, Genres, Time, and Authors

chapter 3|27 pages

Mythopoetic Suspense, Eschatology and Misterium

World-Building Lessons from Dostoevsky

chapter 4|16 pages

Building the Vorkosigan Universe

part |73 pages

Audiovisual Worlds

chapter 5|15 pages

Our World

World-Building in Thornton Wilder’s Our Town

chapter 6|19 pages

“Suckled on Shadows”

States of Decay in Mervyn Peake’s Gormenghast Novels

part |68 pages

Transmedia Worlds

chapter 9|16 pages

The Softer Side of Dune

The Impact of the Social Sciences on World-Building

chapter 10|16 pages

Earth, Air, Fire, and Water

Balance and Interconnectivity in the Fractured Worlds of Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman’s The Death Gate Cycle

chapter 11|15 pages

Welcome to the “Second-stage” Lynchverse

Twin Peaks: The Return and the Impossibility of Return Vs. Getting a Return

chapter 12|19 pages

The Fault in Our Star Trek

(Dis)Continuity Mapping, Textual Conservationism, and the Perils of Prequelization