Literature DB >> 32382408

Sleep, disruption and the 'nightmare of total illumination' in late nineteenth and early twentieth-century dystopian fiction.

Laura E Ludtke1.   

Abstract

This article addresses the charge that the introduction of the electric light in the late nineteenth century increased disruptions to the human body's biological processes and interfered with the oscillating sleeping-waking cycle. By considering the nineteenth century research into the factors that motivate and disrupt sleep in concert with contemporary discussions of the physiology of street lighting, this article exposes how social and political forces shaped the impact of artificial light on sleep and, more perniciously, on bodily autonomy. As a close reading of artificial light in three influential dystopian novels building on these historical contexts demonstrates, dystopian fiction challenges the commonplace assumption that the advent of the electric light, or of widespread street lighting in public urban spaces, posed an immediate or inherent threat to sleep. Beginning with H. G. Wells's The Sleeper Awakes (1899), in which the eponymous sleeper emerges from a cataleptic trance into a future in which electric light and power are used to control the populace, representations of artificial light in early dystopian fiction of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries depict a nightmare of total illumination in which the state exerted its control over the individual. In Aldous Huxley's Brave New World (1932), constant artificial illumination plays a vital role in the chemical and behavioural conditioning undergone by individuals in a post-Fordian world. George Orwell intensifies this relationship between light and individual autonomy in Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949), where access to electric current (and thus light) is limited at certain times of the day, brownouts and electrical rationing occur intermittently, and total illumination is used to torture and reprogram individuals believed to have betrayed Big Brother.
© 2020 The Author(s).

Entities:  

Keywords:  Huxley; Orwell; circadian rhythms; dystopian fiction; electric light; sleep

Year:  2020        PMID: 32382408      PMCID: PMC7202390          DOI: 10.1098/rsfs.2019.0130

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Interface Focus        ISSN: 2042-8898            Impact factor:   3.906


  9 in total

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Review 2.  Timing and consolidation of human sleep, wakefulness, and performance by a symphony of oscillators.

Authors:  Derk-Jan Dijk; Malcolm von Schantz
Journal:  J Biol Rhythms       Date:  2005-08       Impact factor: 3.182

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Authors:  Vladimir M Kovalzon
Journal:  J Hist Neurosci       Date:  2009-07       Impact factor: 0.529

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Authors:  M Bentivoglio; G Grassi-Zucconi
Journal:  Sleep       Date:  1997-07       Impact factor: 5.849

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Authors:  K Kubota
Journal:  Neurosci Res       Date:  1989-08       Impact factor: 3.304

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Authors:  F Halberg
Journal:  Annu Rev Physiol       Date:  1969       Impact factor: 19.318

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Journal:  Br J Ind Med       Date:  1987-11

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Authors:  F UNGAR; F HALBERG
Journal:  Science       Date:  1962-09-28       Impact factor: 47.728

9.  Industrial Fatigue and the Productive Body: the Science of Work in Britain, c. 1900-1918.

Authors:  Steffan Blayney
Journal:  Soc Hist Med       Date:  2017-09-18       Impact factor: 0.973

  9 in total
  1 in total

Review 1.  Current Insights into Optimal Lighting for Promoting Sleep and Circadian Health: Brighter Days and the Importance of Sunlight in the Built Environment.

Authors:  Fabian-Xosé Fernandez
Journal:  Nat Sci Sleep       Date:  2022-01-06
  1 in total

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