PART I - TECHNOPOLITICS
Comeback to the Forbidden Planet: Dystopia in the Era of Collapse; Andoni Alonso Puello and Iñaki Arzóz
Unidentified Technical Objects: Not Working, Breaking Laws, Doing Nothing; Eugene Kuchinov and Ivan Spitsyn
Techno-Naturans Without Terraforming: From the Geoengineering of Mastery to Sympoietic Agency; Jorge León Casero
Cyberculture, (Dys)Topias and Transformation; Rocío Rueda
Smart Utopian Cities: Hangovers and Aftermaths; José María Castejón and Enrique Cano
PART II - POSTHUMANIST BIOPOLITICS
Post-Apocalyptic Critical Dystopias; Corin Braga
In the World of Postselves and Posthumans: The Biopolitical Utopia of Postmortalism; Anna Bugajska
From Utopia to Biopolitical Dystopia: The Creation of New Human Beings in Some Utopias of the Nineteenth-Century; Julia Urabayen
Between Utopia and Reality (Modern Transhumanism Theories and Posthumanism); Ayazhan Sagikyzy and Anara Asanovna Uyzbayeva
PART III - NON-WESTERN POLITICS
Chinese Utopia and Dystopia from Non-Western Point of View; Dmitry Martynov
Challenging Dystopia with Laughter: Yan Lianke's Inversion of Political Slogans in Serve the People! (2005); Angela Yiu
From the Virtuous City to Yūtubiya: A Condensed Account of Utopia Writings in Arabic; Yehoshua Frenkel
Latin American Modernity and the Historical Role of the Integration Utopia; Juan Pro
PART IV - MASS MEDIA AND AESTHETIC POLITICS
The Creative Utopias of Abolitionist Organizing; Rebecca Zorach
Surveillance and Utopia; Daniel Panka
Utopias and Dystopias Through Images: The View of the Future in Films and Television Series; Leticia Florez Farfán and Gerardo De la Fuente Lora
The Way Out is Through: Co-Produced Critical Utopias as Antidotes to Anthropocene Melancholia; Paul Raven
Phototopia: (Re)Geneating Life from Photographs; Ana Peraica.