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09 April 2024

LITERARY CRITICISM / Subjects & Themes / Historical Events, Literature: history and criticism, HISTORY / Modern / 21st Century, LITERARY CRITICISM / Comparative Literature, Cultural studies
'Pike examines the legacy of the Cold War through what he calls “the bunker fantasy,” an ambivalent desire containing not only the promise of safety and shelter but also the prospect of fear, isolation, and confinement.'
—CHOICE
'Throughout the book, Pike turns to a dizzying assortment of “contradictory” yet illuminating examples, from Afrofuturism to Albanian civil defence architecture. His chapters on twenty-first-century adaptations of the Cold War built environment offer a particularly useful model for what a post-Cold War formalism might look like.'
— Brian K Goodman, Arizona State University
Introduction: After the imminent apocalypse: the bunker fantasy since the Cold War
1 The fantasy of 1980s survivalism since the Reagan years
2 Survivance in fictions of survivalism since the Reagan years
3 The hedgehog, the tortoise, and the world: Switzerland, Albania, and the global bunker fantasy
4 Life in the ontological bunker: Cold War continuance, appropriation, and repurposing from America to Taiwan
5 Writing from the epistemological bunker: fictions of postnuclear apocalypse
6 Wall and tunnel: security, containment ,and subversion
Conclusion: Biosecurity, siloing, and the legacies of a shelter society