Ideology and Scientific Thought in H.P. Lovecraft
This book examines, from an ideological perspective, the narrative work of H.P. Lovecraft.
To pursue that goal, the analysis is sustained in two different foundations. To begin with, it is well known that the standard Lovecraftian tale deals with the discovery of a reality beyond reality.
With that premise, this book establishes a theoretical framework that grasps the ideological implications that Lovecraft’s narrative oeuvre might
hide under the appearance of mere horror or science fiction stories, providing an original approach to the analysis of the Lacanian Real beyond
the Lovecraftian fiction.
Ideology and Scientific Thought
Secondly, science is one of the cornerstones in Lovecraft’s fiction. Science, and its technological applications, are meaningfully connected with the triad of the Real (proposed by the Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Žižek, and composed by the symbolic Real, the imaginary Real and the real Real), since science is clearly depicted as a way of gaining access to the unfathomable real Real.
At the same time, Lovecraft was heavily influenced by some scientists he read during his lifetime: Darwin, Galton, Haeckel, Planck, Einstein… and they had a strong impact in the writer’s perception of the world.
This volume pays special attention to scientific issues present in his narrative, in order to cast light on how different scientific disciplines might have influenced Lovecraft’s ideological background