Enfilade

New Book | Futuristic Fiction, Utopia, and Satire

Posted in books by Editor on January 1, 2024

Coming in March from Brepols:

Giulia Iannuzzi, Futuristic Fiction, Utopia, and Satire in the Age of the Enlightenment: Samuel Madden’s ‘Memoirs of the Twentieth Century’ (1733) (Brepols, 2024), 460 pages, ISBN: 978-2503606026, €125.

Published anonymously in 1733, Memoirs of the Twentieth Century is one of the earliest futuristic novels known in Anglophone and Euro-American literature. It foregrounds an acceleration of history brought about by an increasing degree of global interconnectedness and the exclusion of prophetism and astrology as credible ways to know the future. The work of Samuel Madden, an Irish writer and philanthropist of Whig sympathies, it consists of a collection of diplomatic letters composed in the 1990s, which the narrator claims were brought to him from the time to come by a supernatural entity. Through these correspondences, twentieth-century world scenarios are spread out before the reader, in which British naval power rules the waves and international commerce, while the transnational scheming of the Jesuits threatens the independence of weaker European courts.

This book—which includes a study followed by an annotated edition of the text—assesses the cultural significance of this literary work, as an apt observatory on how historical time as a cultural construction was shaped, during the eighteenth century, by new forms of transnational circulation of information, and by the dubious space carved out in European culture by seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century debates on the nature of historical knowledge. Through and by means of the Memoirs case study, this volume aims to contribute to a wider cultural history of the future and speculative fiction. The novel’s ironic distancing of beliefs considered to be superstitious and absurd—such as divination techniques and occult and magical disciplines—offers an exceptional testimony to the negotiation of the boundaries of verisimilitude and credibility within a religious enlightenment.

Giulia Iannuzzi has worked on the history of publishing and translation processes, and on the history of speculative imagination in a comparative perspective. Her articles have been published in academic journals such as History, History of Historiography, Cromohs, Perspectives, American Literary Scholarship, and Journal of Romance Studies.

c o n t e n t s

Introduction: Knowledge, Power, and Time in the Age of the Enlightenment

Part I | Samuel Madden’s Eighteenth-Century Memoirs from the Future
1  Where Was the Future?
2  When Was the Future?
3  An Irish Whig between Philanthropism and Literature
4  An Eighteenth-Century Twentieth Century
5  An (Unreliable) Historian of the Future
6  A ‘Good Genius’ and the ‘Scene of Things below’
7  Empirical Science, Global Consciousness, and ‘the History of Future Times’
8  Blurring the Dichotomy between History and Fiction
9  Satirising Past Futures
10  ‘Publishing’ the Letters
11  ‘This Prodigious Society’: Anti-Jesuit Satire
12  Whose Credulity, Whose Credibility
13  Bookish Mysteries and an ‘Alternate George VI’
14  Concluding Remarks

Part II | Memoirs of the Twentieth Century
A Note on the Text
Samuel Madden, Memoirs of the Twentieth Century

Notes to the Text
Bibliography
Index