The article discusses selected poetry by Darko Suvin against the background of his theoretical writings about science fiction, utopia and poetry. It argues that Suvin's poetry estranges the ideological view of the present and history as an inevitable reproduction of injustice and alienation.
The focus is on several poems included in the collections The Long March: Notes on the Way 1981-1984 (1987) and Defined by a Hollow: Essays on Utopia, Science Fiction, and Political Epistemology (2010), as well as in "Three Long Poems 2000-2016" (2016) and "Poems of Old Age (2002-17)" (2017) available on the author's website.