学位论文详细信息
Bugs After the Bomb: Insect Representations in Postatomic American Fiction and Film.
Insect metaphor;Feminist theory;William S. Burroughs;Philip K. Dick;Octavia E. Butler;Animal studies;Screen Arts and Cultures;American and Canadian Studies;English Language and Literature;Women"s and Gender Studies;Humanities;English and Women"s Studies
Cassel, Catherine S.Blair, Sara B ;
University of Michigan
关键词: Insect metaphor;    Feminist theory;    William S. Burroughs;    Philip K. Dick;    Octavia E. Butler;    Animal studies;    Screen Arts and Cultures;    American and Canadian Studies;    English Language and Literature;    Women";    s and Gender Studies;    Humanities;    English and Women"s Studies;   
Others  :  https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/handle/2027.42/133284/cscassel_1.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
瑞士|英语
来源: The Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship
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【 摘 要 】

As cold-blooded invertebrates which more often provoke disgust than delight, insect tend to be overlooked within animal studies in favor of warm-blooded beings in whom it is easier to perceive expression of emotion more ;;like ours.” Since insects and other arthropods are often conceived of as smaller, ;;lower,” and more ;;simple” forms of life, they are thought of as more like machines than animals, lifeless automatons that react to the world with blind instinct rather than agential beings who respond to the world with proclivities and inclinations all their own. This dissertation examines how such a view of insects and other bug-like creatures embodied cultural anxieties about postatomic life in 20th century North American literature, film, and culture. I coin the term ;;insectoid figuration” to expand beyond Linnaean classification to account for the more affectively motivated layperson’s categorical understanding of ;;bugs” in order to argue that insectoid figuration became a powerful political register for articulating concerns about American social order, language, dehumanization, and xenophobia. I bridge critical animal studies, materialist feminism, affect theory, and posthumanism to reveal how humanism depends upon abjection of animality by espousing exceptionalist views of human affective capacities. The various insectoid figurations which I explore in this dissertation—the bevy of mutated, big bugs which stomped across the celluloid screen in the 1950s; the centipede as an agent of viral control in William S. Burroughs’s Naked Lunch and other cut-up experimentations; the femme fatale gynoid modeled on insect mimicry and praying mantises in Philip K. Dick’s dystopic Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?; the Oankali, an insectoid alien species which seeks genetic trade with humans in Octavia E. Butler’s speculative trilogy Lilith’s Brood—shuttle between the literal and figurative, the material and semiotic, encompass a range of affects and anxieties, and ultimately form a signifying constellation which lays bare shifts in how American social order was conceptualized after the chaos of World War II and in the aftermath of atomic potentiality especially in response to severe environmental degradation.

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