Fortean Times

TAKING THE FUTURE AS READ

Is it conceivable that writers can accurately predict the future? Academics at the literature department of the German University of Tübingen certainly thought so when they set up Project Cassandra in 2017.

Taking its name from the Trojan priestess who could foresee the future, the project’s initial aim was to investigate novels from different countries to find pointers to future conflicts. Daunted by the challenge of reading so many works in such a multitude of languages, the academics switched to focusing on what they called the “literary infrastructure” – that is, how the book was received. Did it accumulate awards and state prizes? Or was it banned, and the author made to go into exile? The data was fed into a computer and a conflict risk score developed.

Results were impressive. In 2017, Algerian dystopian fiction and the buzz around it flagged up the country as a region of interest. Two years later, civil protests broke out in Algiers and several other cities, culminating in the fall of the president. Towards the end of 2019, Azerbaijan donated anti-Armenian books to Georgian libraries. A year later, 6,000 soldiers and civilians were killed in a six-week battle over Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave of Azerbaijan populated by ethnic Armenians.

Soon after its foundation, the project received funding from the defence ministry. Due to a government reshuffle and/or the Covid-19 pandemic, this was withdrawn in the winter of 2020. Project Cassandra was no more. Nevertheless, during its brief existence it excited considerable scepticism, even though it was entirely pragmatic in nature and made no claims that writers possessed prophetic powers. Instead, the project’s instigator, Jürgen Wertheimer, a professor of comparative literature, spoke of great writers’ “sensory talent”, an ability to channel

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Fortean Times

Fortean Times2 min read
The Reverend’s Review
When people hear I’m ordained, they often assume I grew up in the church. Wrong! I found churches (and Christians) kind of scary. Especially when they smiled during hymns or passed a cup to guzzle Jesus’s blood. The creepiest, though, was when congre
Fortean Times4 min read
Db Cooper Found?
On 24 November 1971, a man boarded Northwest Orient Flight 305 from Portland to Seattle, carrying what he later told flight attendants was a suitcase bomb. Once airborne, he threatened to detonate it if they did not follow his instructions. He allowe
Fortean Times11 min read
Appreciating Esoteric Symbolism
Examining the Nature of a Belief in Tarot Simon Kenny Iff Books 2023 Pb, 248pp, £17.99, ISBN 9781803413921 Johannes Fiebig (ed) Taschen 2023 Hb, 444pp, £100, ISBN 9783836586429 Titan Books 2023 78 cards plus guide, £24.99, ISBN 9781803367217 The most

Related Books & Audiobooks