Taking a cross-cultural approach, the book centres around the critical engagements that literary and media texts have with the representations of the multiverse, beyond considering this subject as a mere rhetorical flourish or a passing fad. A diverse and international team of authors engage with the multiverse from the point of view of "other worlds," understanding it not as the appearance of another independent world, but as the collision of two or more different worlds into one of them. From this key finding, the multiverse encourages us to pay attention to the influence that fiction exerts on narratives and world-building, providing possible frameworks to rethink critical aspects of temporality, space, self, society, and culture in contemporary times.
This pioneering work will interest students and scholars working in the areas of media and cultural studies, comparative literature, popular culture studies, speculative fiction, and transmedia studies.
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David O. Dowling, PhD, School of Journalism and Mass Communication, The University of Iowa; Author of Podcast Journalism: The Promise and Perils of Audio Reporting (2024).
"This excellent collection on theories of the multiverse explores fundamental questions about our world through the imaginative possibilities of alternatives to it. The focus is admirably broad: taking in science fiction, graphic novels, video games, and television to examine digital space, consciousness, parallel and other worlds, and the nature of reality in both its physical and its spiritual manifestations. Equally diverse are the authors brought together in conversation - revealing new voices from North and Latin America, Europe, Africa, and Asia. Carefully curated by its editors The Multiverse as Theory offers the first studies of the contemporary influence of multiverse thinking and its epistemic limits."
Martin Willis, Professor, School of English, Communication and Philosophy, Cardiff University.
"This book, edited by Cabrera Torrecilla and Sáez de Adana, brings together a series of fundamental contributions to understand the key role that the concept of multiverse plays in modern and postmodern fictional narratives."
Gerardo Blumenkratz, Chair, Media & Communication Arts Department, City College of New York, City University of New York.