The Future Isn’t What It Used to Be

Heterotopia, Power, and Surveillance in Caryl Churchill’s Far Away

Authors

  • Basaad Maher Mhayyal University of Baghdad/ College of Science for Women
  • Asst. Prof. Sanaa ALGhareeb College of Education for Women/ University of Baghdad

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31973/p1ahtv77

Keywords:

Far Away, dystopia, docile body, heterotopia, carceral society, surveillance, power

Abstract

This paper aims to answer the question of whether dystopian narratives may have any glimpse of hope although they reflect a pessimistic view of their writers. In Far Away, Caryl Churchill’s most terrifying play despite not including horror scenes except for the parade scene that takes place every night and the terror is reflected through conversation only, the playwright tried her best to shed light on a grotesque vision of a dystopian society where only terrorism, oppression, imprisonment, disloyalty, and violence are found. This dystopian world reveals how everything is considered an enemy to everything else, even nature becomes an enemy to humans and Churchill humanizes nature instead of dehumanizing people. This paper tackles Far Away in the light of the Foucauldian concepts of the docile body, heterotopia, carceral society, power, and surveillance which are reflected by Churchill.

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References

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Published

2024-12-15

Issue

Section

English linguistics and literature

How to Cite

Mhayyal, B., & ALGhareeb , S. . (2024). The Future Isn’t What It Used to Be: Heterotopia, Power, and Surveillance in Caryl Churchill’s Far Away. Al-Adab Journal, 151, 1-18. https://doi.org/10.31973/p1ahtv77

Publication Dates

Received

2024-01-17

Revised

2024-02-04

Accepted

2024-02-08

Published Online First

2024-12-15

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