Abstract

Frank Herbert's influential science fiction novelDune(1965) is usually understood as a prescient work of environmentalism. Yet it is also concerned with empire, and not merely in an abstract way. Herbert worked in politics with the men who oversaw the United States’ overseas territories, and he took an unusually strong interest in Indigenous communities in the Pacific Northwest, particularly the Quileute Nation. Conversations with Quileute interlocutors both inspiredDuneand help explain Herbert's turn toward environmentalism. This article recovers the neglected imperial context for Herbert's writing, reinterpretingDunein light of that context.

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