Popular Culture Review Vol. 26, No. 1, Winter 2015 | Page 66

some media, such as cinema or comic books, have been arbitrarily excluded from “literature” and are still to be considered as canonically eligible material. The unifying concept of parallel dimensions allows us to progress towards a better understanding of "literature” - in all its forms - as a narrative production of the imaginary, and hence helps not only to define our object of study, but to better evaluate its influence upon our collective consciousness: if we are to consider the bible as work of literature - just as we consider Greek and Roman mythologies as fictitious narrations - then the influence of parallel dimensions over our culture becomes an undeniable fact, which makes literary studies suddenly all the more crucial. Entire genres, such as the marvelous and science fiction, are based upon and determined by the concept of parallel dimensions; it could even be argued that the most realistic novel constitutes a parallel dimension for it organizes realistically a necessarily non-existent reality.19 The fantastic appears to be the only mode devoted to representing the transition between our reality and a parallel dimension, and “A World of Difference" as well as "A World of His Own" are in this sense very significant, for they both tell of the encounter between our world and another, directly related to our capacity of imagination - in the words of Rod Serling himself, “You unlock this door with the key of imagination. Beyond it is another dimension (...).” In the case of Matheson, this encounter between reality and a parallel dimension often becomes a transition from one to the other, echoing the structure of two other episodes, one based on his short story “Third from the Sun” and the other directly scripted by him, “The Invaders,” which prove difficult to categorize, although they might fall into science fiction, especially the latter. In “Third from the Sun,” two families decide to leave what appears to be earth aboard an experimental spaceship in order to escape atomic doom, and we discover at the very end, once they have already departed, that they are actually heading towards Earth, the “third planet from the sun.” In “The Invaders," a terrified woman is chased around her house by a mysterious albeit rather small flying saucer that she eventually destroys hysterically with a hatchet; we then hear a desperate radio message emanating from the saucer in which an alarmed officer informs “Central Control” that the ship is destroyed, that a member of the crew is dead and that this place is populated by “giant creatures.” As the woman starts to 19 T he case of Trum an Capote's In Cold Blood remains a very unique and isolated case of non-fiction novel; however, when w e consider the semiotic weight of any intentionally aesthetic treatment of language, w e may conclude that, for all its lack of imagination, In Cold Blood is a parallel dimension, or at least has become one now that the original historical context in which the crimes took place is no longer. 62