Philip K Dick's Time Out of Joint

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What is Reality? What is reality? This is the question Philip K. Dick poses in his book, Time Out of Joint. Dick strategically uses literary devices such as narrative structure and symbolism in order to comment on one’s perception of what is real, and what is fiction. By making “time out of joint” and allowing a shift in moral power within his novel, Dick exposes the feelings of paranoia and insecurity that were experienced during the fifties, when Dick wrote this novel, but implies that there is hope that peace can still be attained. By structuring his novel where time is out of joint, Dick is able to illustrate that one’s perception of reality is entirely based on what one believes to be fact. This point is illustrated through Ragle Gumm, who, “from his years of active military life” in the beginning of the story, “prided himself on his physical agility” (Dick 100). It is not until time is mended again toward the end of the book that he realizes that it had been, in fact, his father that had served in the war. This demonstrates how one’s firm belief can turn into a reality, as it did for Ragle Gumm for the two and a half years he lived in the fabricated city of Old Town. Symbolism is an integral component of Time Out of Joint because it further illustrates Dick’s assertion that reality is not always what it seems to be. He appropriately illustrates this idea in his science fiction novel during the scene when the soft-drink stand turns into a simple slip of paper. This scene represents the disparity between how the world exists to Ragle Gumm, and how the world actually exists in Dick’s novel. Dick uses this scene to symbolize America in the fifties, which is the time period in which this novel was published. Referred back to a... ... middle of paper ... ...Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) during the Cold War Era. In order to keep the violence from escalating, both sides had to withdraw, and neither side would have an advantage. By the end of the book, Dick makes conclusions about reality when he discusses Ragle’s temporary family. “…I will consider them my family, because in the two years and a half at Old Town they have been a genuine family…” (Dick 253). This had become his reality, which furthers Dick’s assertion that reality is what is perceived and experience by an individual, since experience represents fact. Narrative structure was crucial to this understanding of fiction versus reality, and the development of the disappearing soft-drink stand as a symbol of the skewed perception of America in the fifties. It is also by making “time out of joint” that a shift in power occurs, and peace is finally attainable.

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