New Books Network

Decolonizing the Novum

Apr 13, 2026
A discussion about how science fiction reimagines the early colonial archive and the idea of novelty tied to conquest. They explore narrative strategies like time travel, inversions, and indigenous mapping that rewrite contact stories. Conversations trace how sixteenth century writing, bureaucracy, and mining shaped colonial modernity and how speculative rewritings open anti-colonial imaginaries.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Novum Tied To The Invention Of The New World

  • The novum links science fiction's notion of novelty to the historical invention of the New World after 1492.
  • Zimmer argues Latin American SF revisits conquest archives to rethink novelty as entangled with colonization and contingency.
INSIGHT

Speculation Reoriented Toward Archival Counterfactuals

  • Decolonizing the novum keeps speculative modes but reorients them toward colonial archives and alternative histories.
  • Examples include SF that rewrites conquest as alien invasions or sends Mesoamericans to Spain to open counterfactual possibilities.
INSIGHT

Colonial Era As Technological Modernity

  • Early Iberian colonization entwined writing, bureaucracy, and mining technologies with modernity long before industrial capitalism.
  • Zimmer highlights Potosí and Zacatecas silver extraction as cutting-edge technologies central to colonial power and modern economic formation.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app