The Man in the High Castle and Philosophy

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The Man in the High Castle and Philosophy Page 24

by Bruce Krajewski


  Shirer, William. 2011. The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany. Simon and Schuster.

  Sternhell, Zeev. 1986 [1983]. Neither Right nor Left: Fascist Ideology in France. Berkeley: University of California Press.

  Sternhell, Zeev, Mario Sznajder, and Maia Asheri. 1994 [1989]. The Birth of Fascist Ideology: From Cultural Rebellion to Political Revolution. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

  Suvin, Darko. “Dick’s Opus” in Joseph B. Olander, and Martin Harry Greenberg Philip K. Dick. Taplinger.

  Taylor, James Stacey. 2012. Death, Posthumous Harm, and Bioethics. Routledge.

  Turtledove, Harry. 1992. The Guns of the South. Del Rey.

  ———. 1994. In the Balance: An Alternate History of the Second World War. Del Rey.

  ———. 1999. Colonization: Second Contact. Del Rey.

  ———. 2010. Hitler’s War. Del Rey.

  Van Inwagen, Peter. 1986. An Essay on Free Will. Oxford University Press.

  ———. 2017. Thinking about Free Will. Cambridge University Press.

  Vaneigem, Raoul. 2012 [1967]. The Revolution of Everyday Life. PM Press.

  Waite, Geoff. 1996. Nietzsche’s Corps/e: Aesthetics, Politics, Prophecy, or, the Spectacular Technoculture of Everyday Life. Duke University Press.

  Waldron, Jeremy. 2004. Terrorism and the Uses of Terror. The Journal of Ethics.

  Warrick, Patricia. 1980. The Encounter of Taoism and Fascism in The Man in the High Castle. Science-Fiction Studies.

  Washington, Booker T. 1995 [1895]. Up from Slavery. Dover.

  Wilhelm, Richard and Cary F. Baynes, trans. 1967. The I Ching, or Book of Changes. Princeton University Press.

  Williams, Paul. 1986. Only Apparently Real: The World of Philip K. Dick. Arbor House.

  Wittkower, D.E. 2011. Time in Unfixed You Are. In Wittkower, ed., Philip K. Dick and Philosophy: Do Androids Have Kindred Spirits? Open Court.

  Žižek, Slavoj. 1991. Looking Awry: An Introduction to Jacques Lacan through Popular Culture. MIT Press.

  ———. 2017. Trouble in Paradise: From the End of History to the End of Capitalism. Melville House.

  Agents of Philosophical Propaganda

  EMILIANO AGUILAR got his MA from the Universidad de Buenos Aires (UBA), Facultad de Filosofía y Letras (Argentina). He has published chapters in books such as Orphan Black and Philosophy: Grand Theft DNA (2016) and Mr. Robot and Philosophy: Beyond Good and Evil Corp (2017). He likes to watch little windows showing alternate realities slightly different from ours. People call them “movies in Blu-ray.”

  There is surely a possible world where ANANYA CHATTORAJ fulfills her dream of being a professional knitter, binge TV watcher, and cat cuddler. In her actual world, she settles for studying philosophy of science in her PhD program.

  MACIEJ CISOWSKI holds an MA in Philosophy, though he’s not actually sure if it has wu. He spends his time writing ethically questionable code for the Tyrell Corporation. In an alternate timeline he would surely be less prone to discussing skeptical paradoxes and parallel universes. In an alternate timeline he would surely be more prone to discussing skeptical paradoxes and parallel universes.

  MARC W. COLE is a PhD candidate at the University of Leeds, who works on Aristotle’s metaphysics of mind. When not busy with this, Marc likes to think about the role of law in politics. In his free time, he does martial arts of all sorts. Armed with philosophical knowledge and sweet kicks, Marc resists the Nazis permanently.

  BRETT COPPENGER fears the rise of the Nazi regime in all possible worlds. To assuage his fears, he keeps himself busy by teaching philosophy. He is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Tuskegee University. His research and teaching interests are in epistemology, philosophy of science, and philosophy of religion. He previously contributed to Arrested Development and Philosophy.

  SAM DIRECTOR is a PhD student in the Philosophy Department at the University of Colorado—Boulder. His research focuses on issues in both applied ethics and political philosophy. Specifically, he is interested in investigating the nature of rights, consent, and autonomy, with the goal of applying them to issues in ethics and political philosophy. He is rarely not doing philosophy. But, when he takes a break from philosophy, he enjoys talking about movies and literature.

  VERENA EHRNBERGER currently works as a legal expert in the corporate world, which sometimes reminds her a lot of The Man in the High Castle universe. Nonetheless she is convinced that in some parallel universe everything is just fine. Verena studies philosophy and psychotherapy at the University of Vienna and is determined to do something with these skills in the future, because humankind has too much potential to just accept the status quo. Just like Juliana, she always bets on the best in people. She also blogs for TEDxVienna on a regular basis.

  BENJAMIN EVANS hails from the alternative reality called Canada. A not-so-secret member of the Resistance, Evans has earned four graduate degrees in philosophy, humanities, and fine arts, most recently a PhD from the New School for Social Research in New York City. When he’s not plotting revolution or writing about aesthetic theory, he likes to track down strange movies of unknown origin.

  JOSHUA HETER received his PhD in philosophy from Saint Louis University and has contributed to both Orphan Black and Philosophy: Grand Theft DNA and The Princess Bride and Philosophy: Inconceivable! When he’s not teaching philosophy at Iowa Western Community College, he spends his time contemplating whether (given the technology and opportunity) he would be morally justified in traveling back in time to assassinate the young Adolf Hitler.

  COREY HORN is finishing his undergraduate degree in Philosophy at Eastern Washington University. His main area of focus is within the realm of political theory and cosmopolitan idealism, but in his spare time you will find him with his friends at the bar, contemplating the ethics of Nazis, villains, and whether or not pineapples belong on pizza (the answer is they do).

  TIMOTHY HSIAO teaches philosophy at Florida Gulf Coast University and Florida South Western State College. His research focuses on applied ethics, where he plans to Make Natural Law Theory Great Again. His articles have appeared in journals such as Public Affairs Quarterly, Philosophia, and the Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics. His website is timhsiao.org. He welcomes correspondence (and hate mail from vegans).

  TIM JONES received his PhD from the School of Literature, Drama, and Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia. He has published several essays in the Popular Culture and Philosophy series, including “Mulder and Scully, You’re Late!” in The X-Files and Philosophy: The Truth Is In Here.

  JOHN V. KARAVITIS was compelled to write his chapter for this book. There was no way out for him. And, as always, he was compelled to follow the dictates of his own personal oracle, his overworked and underappreciated Magic 8-BallTM. Did we say “dictates”? We meant “thoughtful suggestions and constructive criticism.” Especially given that the oracle kept giving John the same reply to every one of his questions: “Concentrate and ask again.” (Wait, what?)

  CHRISTOPHER KETCHAM earned his doctorate at the University of Texas at Austin. He teaches business and ethics for the University of Houston Downtown. His research interests are risk management, applied ethics, social justice, and East-West comparative philosophy. He has done recent work in the philosophical ideas of forgiveness, Emmanuel Levinas’s responsibility, and Gabriel Marcel’s spirit of abstraction, after which, thank heaven he did not catch the disease of intelligence.

  BRUCE KRAJEWSKI is Professor and Chair of the Department of English at the University of Texas at Arlington. He has written about fascism in The New York Times, and published a few bits about philosophy and esotericism. He wonders whether Maurice Blanchot is correct in his famous essay on science fiction when Blanchot writes, “No one is interested in the existence of a completely different time of a completely different world.”

  DONALD MCCARTHY is an adjunct professor at SUNY Old Westbury and a graduate of the City College of New York�
��s MFA program. He’s published both fiction and non-fiction at venues such as Salon, Paste Magazine, Alternet, Plots with Guns, and more. He has yet to visit an alternate universe, but his desire to do so grows with every passing day.

  LUKASZ MUNIOWSKI is a doctoral student at the Faculty of Neophilology at Warsaw University. He’s working on a thesis entitled “Tools of the Weak: The Transgressive Art of Hubert Selby, Jr.” In addition to a publication about Last Exit to Brooklyn, he also has a piece in Acta Philologica on Michael Jordan as a mythical figure.

  FERNANDO GABRIEL PAGNONI BERNS (PhD student) works at Universidad de Buenos Aires (UBA) as Professor in “Literatura de las Artes Combinadas II.” He teaches seminars on international horror film and has published chapters in books such as Peanuts and Philosophy: You’re a Wise Man Charlie Brown! (2017) and Horrors of War: The Undead on the Battlefield (2015). He lives in an alternate universe where TV reality stars become presidents and people in the Oscars can’t keep straight who’s won the prize. How very self-indulgent of him.

  MIGUEL PALEY is a pataphysicist, head coach of The New School Men’s Basketball team (The Narwhals), and a PhD candidate in philosophy at The New School for Social Research. When not screaming at his team to play defense, Miguel writes on Bergson’s philosophy of mind and its influence on the work of Emmanuel Levinas, Alfred Whitehead, and Hans Jonas. He also deeply admires the names of Üexkull and Hundertwasser. Gabriel Garcia Marquez once made him gross lemonade.

  FRANKLIN PERKINS is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, a position he came to through a number of factors, including a middle-school decision to study martial arts, an encounter with Leibniz’s writings on China, and Allied victory in World War II. In The Grasshopper Lies Heavy, he is most likely a carpenter. In this reality, instead, he is editor of the journal Philosophy East and West and author of Heaven and Earth Are not Humane: The Problem of Evil in Classical Chinese Philosophy, Leibniz: A Guide for the Perplexed, and Leibniz and China: A Commerce of Light.

  ELIZABETH RARD is currently working on her PhD in philosophy at UC Davis in California. Neighbors describe her as perfectly pleasant, but with a rather distorted memory of history. She will regularly stare blankly while famous historical events are discussed, and will sometimes reference wars that no one else seems to remember, all while drinking her five-cent instant tea, admiring her marigolds dreamily, and enjoying a suspicious looking smoke from a packet marked “Land-o-Smiles.”

  DENNIS WEISS is a fan of all-things televisual and when he’s not watching television he is Professor of Philosophy at York College of Pennsylvania where he regularly teaches courses on the intersections of philosophy, technology, popular culture, and science fiction. He’s authored articles exploring the philosophical implications of Buffy, Data, Dick, and Sarah (a certain clone) and is the editor of Interpreting Man (2003) and Design, Mediation, and the Posthuman (2014). He is currently at work on a project examining the rise of the posthuman in twenty-first century television.

  M. BLAKE WILSON is Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice at California State University, Stanislaus. Before that, he was a graduate student working on political philosophy. Before that, he was a criminal defense lawyer. Before that, he was a law student tracking down Philip K. Dick books at a time when most of them were out of print. He contributed a chapter to The Who and Philosophy (2016) by pretending to understand Nietzsche, tragedy, and Pete Townshend.

  As a PhD student in Environmental Psychology at the University of Gröningen, STEPHANIE J. ZAWADZKI spends most of her time in awe of humanity’s ability to create problems (and how consistently it outshines our ability to solve them). She seeks spiritual clarity on her yoga mat and through soul-searching conversations with her cats. Together with the alphabetically inferior T.J. Zawadzki, Steph rails against the forces of space-time in their fight to occupy the same reality.

  T.J. ZAWADZKI -(STOP)- TRIPLE ACADEMIC AGENT UNDERCOVER AS INTERDISCIPLINARY PHD STUDENT -(STOP)- TRAINED IN APPLIED AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY BUT MAINTAINED STRONG TIES WITH GENDER AND SEXUALITY STUDIES -(STOP)- NOW DEFECTED TO DEPARTMENT OF ALTERNATE HISTORY AT UNIVERSITY OF EXETER -(STOP)- APPEALS TO ORACLE AKA ADVISORS TO HELP WRITE NEW HISTORY OF SEXOLOGY IN POLAND -(STOP)- TRUE ALLEGIANCE TO STEPHANIE J. ZAWADZKI AND HER CATS -(STOP)- ESCAPE TO HOLLAND VIA HOUSEBOAT IMMINENT

  Index

  “In this digital publication the page numbers have been removed from the index. Please use the search function of your e-Reading device to locate the terms listed.”

  Abendsen, Hawthorne

  Abendsen, Caroline

  abstraction

  Adorno, Theodor

  The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

  aesthetics

  Africans

  Allies, Allied Forces

  Allyson, June

  Amazon (Prime)

  architecture

  Arendt, Hannah

  assassination

  Augustine, Saint

  Aurelius, Marcus

  Axis powers

  baseball

  Becker, Randall

  Beneš, Edvard

  Benjamin, Walter

  Berlant, Lauren

  Berlin

  Blade Runner

  Blake, Joe

  Brown, Henry Billings

  Burdekin, Katharine

  Burke, Edmund

  Bush, George

  Canon City

  capitalism

  Casablanca

  castle

  Cermak, Anton

  Chase, David

  Chew-Z

  Childan, Robert

  Cinnadella, Joe

  Clinton, Hillary

  Colbert, Stephen

  communism

  conspiracy

  counterfactual

  Crain, Juliana

  Crary, Jonathan

  Crothers, Lauren

  De Blasio, Bill

  D’Holbach, Baron

  Dejerine-Roussy syndrome

  Denton, Sally

  Dick, Philip K.

  Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?

  Dragnet

  dualism, duality

  Du Bois, W.E.B.

  eagle

  “Edelweiss”

  Eichmann, Adolf

  “End of the World” (episode)

  Epictetus

  Epicurus

  epistemology

  esoteric, esotericism

  eugenics

  evil

  “Fallout” (episode)

  fascism

  fate

  FBI

  Festinger, Leon

  freedom

  free will

  Frink, Frank

  Frink, Laura

  Führer

  Gallagher, Caitlin

  Germany, Germans

  Gettier, Edmund

  Gingrich, Newt

  Goebbels, Joseph

  Goldman, Alvin

  The Grasshopper Lies Heavy

  Habermas, Jürgen

  Hammerstein, Oscar

  happiness

  Heisenberg, Werner

  Heston, Charlton

  Heydrich, Reinhard

  Himmler, Heinrich

  Hitler, Adolf

  Hobbes, Thomas

  Hollywood

  Hudson, Rock

  I Ching (Yijing, Book of Changes)

  Ihde, Don

  “The Illustrated Woman” (episode)

  Iowa Western Community College

  Jackson, Robert H.

  Japan, Japanese

  Jaspers, Karl

  jazz

  Jesus

  Jews, Jewish

  Kasoura, Paul and Betty

  Kattago, Siobhan

  Kempeitai

  Kido, Takeshi (Inspector Kido)

  “Kindness” (episode)

  King, Martin Luther

  King, Stephen

  Kotomichi

  Kubrick, Stanley

  Lamont, Corliss

  Landgraf, John

&nb
sp; Laplace, Pierre-Simon

  “The Late Show,”

  “Leave It to Beaver,”

  Lefebvre, Henri

  Lewis, C.S.

  Lewis, David

  Lewis, Sinclair

  libertarianism, liberty

  Libet, Benjamin

  Life

  Lincoln, Abraham

  Locke, John

  Lolita

  Loetze, Alex

  love

  luck

  Lynch, David

  McCarthy, Ed

  McLuhan, Marshall

  The Man in the High Castle (novel)

  The Man in the High Castle (TV show)

  Marcel, Gabriel

  Mars

  Marx, Karl H., Marxism

  Mason, Timothy

  The Medium Is the Massage

  metaphysics

  Meyrowitz, Joshua

  Minority Report

  Mount Rushmore

  Musil, Robert

  Mussolini, Benito

  myth(s)

  Nagel, Thomas

  natural law

  nature

  Nazis (National Socialists)

  Neutral Zone

  Newton, Isaac

  “The New World” (episode)

  New York City

  Niebuhr, Reinhold

  Nineteen Eighty-Four

  No Sense of Place

  Nozick, Robert

  Nuremberg Trials

  Obama, Barack,

  obedience, disobedience

  Olsson, Jeanette

  paranoia

  Paskin, Willa

  Paul, Saint

  Pearce, Rita

  Percival, Daniel

  photographs

  Piketty, Thomas

  Plato

  Plessy, Homer

  Portmore, Douglas

  possible worlds

  Postman, Neil

  Postphenomenology

  The Punch Party

  In Pursuit of Valis

  Radio Free Albemuth

  Rand, Ayn

  Reagan, Ronald

  reality

  Reisch, George A.

  The Resistance

  Rickman, Gregg

  Riefenstahl, Leni

  Rockwell, Norman

  Rogers, Richard

  Romanticism

  Romney, Mitt

  Roosevelt, Franklin

  Russell, Bertrand

  Sampson, Mark

 

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