Chris Baker’s Kokopu Dreams: A Prophetic View of a Disrupted Post-Pandemic World

Autori

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54103/2035-7680/19131

Parole chiave:

New Zealand literature; speculative fiction; Māori mythology; pandemic; trauma

Abstract

The global pandemic, with its multiple and far-reaching disruptions, has forced us to rethink and rewrite the world we live in. Chris Baker’s novel Kokopu Dreams (2000) sounds somehow prophetic today in the aftermath of the Covid-19 crisis. His work could be labelled as “speculative fiction” and placed among the umbrella categories of magic realism, science fiction and post-apocalyptic fiction. Set in Aotearoa New Zealand, the story focuses on the life of the few human survivors of a rapidly-spreading deadly illness caused by the rabbit calicivirus, illegally introduced into the country. The calicivirus has mutated and killed almost all the human population, who is now living in a land controlled by animals and spirits. The novel is also a template of transcultural writing, mixing Māori creation stories, Christian and Celtic mythologies, scientific issues and aspects of everyday life. Having grown up in a contact zone of different cultures―Baker is of Polynesian (Samoan), Anglo-Saxon and Celtic origin, but regards himself as a “Pacific” person―he shares that multiplicity of belonging which is a typical condition in the Pacific region today. Baker deals with a physical and cultural collective trauma, and the process of re-signification of the ethos in a bi-cultural country made of people of mixed ancestry, European and Māori. The re-elaboration of the epidemic experience is therefore based on both a Western rational representation and an indigenous mythical one.

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Biografia autore

Paola Della Valle, Università degli Studi di Torino

Paola Della Valle is Associate Professor at the University of Turin (Italy). She specializes in New Zealand and Pacific literature, postcolonial and gender studies. Her articles appeared in, The Journal of Commonwealth Literature, Textus, NZSA Bulletin of New Zealand Studies, Le Simplegadi, Il Castello di Elsinore, RiCognizioni, English Studies, Semicerchio and Loxias. She has published the monographs From Silence to Voice: The Rise of Māori Literature (Auckland, 2010), Stevenson nel Pacifico: una lettura postcoloniale (Roma, 2013) and Priestley e il tempo, il tempo di Priestley (Torino, 2016).

Riferimenti bibliografici

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Pubblicato

2022-11-30

Come citare

Della Valle, Paola. 2022. «Chris Baker’s Kokopu Dreams: A Prophetic View of a Disrupted Post-Pandemic World». Altre Modernità, n. 28 (novembre):273-85. https://doi.org/10.54103/2035-7680/19131.

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Sezione

Saggi Ensayos Essais Essays