"To Stand a Chance": Quantum Uncertainty and Religious Conversion in Michel Houellebecq's Submission

dc.contributor.authorMolly Schwartzen_US
dc.date.accessioned2019-08-12T07:23:48Z
dc.date.available2019-08-12T07:23:48Z
dc.date.issued2017-09-??
dc.description.abstractMichel Houellebecq’s novel, Submission (2015), is structured around the speculative premise that in the year 2022 the Muslim Brotherhood could become the dominant political party in France, leading to a society-wide shift in values and practices. This paper explores how Houellebecq uses religious conversion in the novel as a literary metaphor for quantum uncertainty. By lacing the patchwork plot with ambiguity and satire, Houellebecq tries to reconcile the random and predetermined elements of human actions, given the physical reality of our atombased world and existence. Against the background of his selfish male and female characters, Houellebecq plays with the possibility of transcending the pitifulness of the contemporary human condition, which both he and his characters ultimately achieve not through religion but through fiction. Interpreting Submission in the context of theories about the unpredictable, computational nature of the universe raises interesting questions about the programmability of human behavior and the use of speculative fiction as a tool for generating alternative futures.en_US
dc.identifierD6839B50-764E-8E34-EB06-A755211478AE
dc.identifier.urihttp://rportal.lib.ntnu.edu.tw:80/handle/20.500.12235/84240
dc.language英文
dc.publisher英語學系zh_tw
dc.publisherDepartment of English, NTNUen_US
dc.relation43(2),297-324
dc.relation.ispartof同心圓:文學與文化研究zh_tw
dc.title"To Stand a Chance": Quantum Uncertainty and Religious Conversion in Michel Houellebecq's Submissionzh-tw

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