We now have all come throughout dystopian visions of a foul future, like Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Story. Much less acquainted is the observe of dangerous futurism, usually hidden inside seemingly compelling tales, which guarantees an absurd tomorrow primarily based on foolhardy assumptions concerning the current. It was my pursuit of the latter that introduced me to a packed conference corridor on the World Science Fiction Conference in Glasgow, UK, in August to look at an all-star panel of authors and critics discussing “techno-Orientalism”. As I found, nonetheless, this concept goes far past fiction; it has…