Mónica Martín
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Utopia as a cosmopolitan method in Alfonso Cuarón’s Children of Men
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This chapter analyses Alfonso Cuarón’s Children of Men as an example of cinematic cosmopolitan utopianism in the light of Tom Moylan’s and Ruth Levitas’s conception of utopia, and Ulrich Beck’s and Gerard Delanty’s critical cosmopolitanism. In contrast to post-9/11 films like I Am Legend, War of the Worlds and Cloverfield, in which apocalyptic circumstances are imputable to zombie or monstrous Others, Children of Men engages in a speculative critique of nonsustainable global neoliberalism that rejects alien scapegoats. Cuarón’s film portrays a dystopian 2027 London afflicted by armed violence, pollution, anti-immigration policies and governmental surveillance. One of the most recognisable global cities in the world, the British capital in the film stands for an ecocidal neoliberal society that has turned infertile and is now unable to give birth to future generations. Yet, Children of Men takes distance from the anti-utopian bias of late twentieth-century cultural texts and social theories –a demise of utopian thinking fostered, among other causes, by the postmodern questioning of grand narratives of progress, utopia’s equation with totalitarian projects, its cooptation by individualist market logics and celebratory end-of-history capitalist discourses, and the ‘disengaged imagination’ of global neoliberal elites. This chapter argues that Children of Men hopes and asks for a cosmopolitan remapping of the global beyond the frameworks provided by anti-utopia, nation, risk and neoliberalism.

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Global London on screen

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