@inbook{c4e7190741a44c89abf0c68363915090,
title = "Utopian realism and race",
abstract = "This chapter examines the {\textquoteleft}peculiar{\textquoteright} utopian temporality of the contemporary moment as expressed in the fictional works of three Black British female writers: Queenie (2019), by Candace Carty-Williams, Swing Time (2016) by Zadie Smith, and Girl, Woman, Other (2019) by Bernadine Evaristo. The chapter argues that these novels represent a particular incarnation of utopian realism. This names a strong commitment in contemporary British fiction to articulating post-racial futures. In utopian realist texts, writers use realism not to convey mimetic depictions of the present here and now but, rather, to convince readers of the viability of alternative, transformed futures. Utopian realists such as Candace Carty-Williams, Zadie Smith, Bernadine Evaristo, Monica Ali, and Diana Evans foreground a relationship between utopian thinking and models drawn from personal and historic experience. Like design fictions, the term given for fictional narratives used by designers of prototype products and technologies to help imagine their future use, these texts offer readers identifiable utopian alternatives to contemporary Britain. Shaped in relation to the long history of Black experience in the United Kingdom, as well as gender and queerness, these novels reveal the need to consider the future not as a speculative possibility but a realisable plan for how we might live.",
keywords = "Bernadine Evaristo, Black British, British Asian, Candace Carty-Williams, justice, race, realism, temporality, utopia, Zadie Smith",
author = "Sara Upstone",
year = "2026",
doi = "10.1017/9781009690485.010",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781009690492",
series = "Cambridge Companions to Literature",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
pages = "197--220",
editor = "Caroline Edwards",
booktitle = "The Cambridge companion to British utopian literature and culture since 1945",
address = "United Kingdom",
}