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El. knyga: Ghost, Android, Animal: Trauma and Literature Beyond the Human

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Ghost, Android, Animal challenges the notion that trauma literature functions as a healing agent for victims of pain and loss by bringing trauma studies into the orbit of posthumanist thought, revealing how depictions of non-human agents invite readers to cross cultural thresholds and interact with the "impossible" pain of others.



Ghost, Android, Animal challenges the notion that trauma literature functions as a healing agent for victims of severe pain and loss by bringing trauma studies into the orbit of posthumanist thought. Investigating how literary representations of ghosts, androids, and animals engage traumatic experience, this book revisits canonical texts by William Faulkner and Toni Morrison and aligns them with experimental and popular texts by Shirley Jackson, Philip K. Dick, and Clive Barker. In establishing this textual field, the book reveals how depictions of non-human agents invite readers to cross subjective and cultural thresholds and interact with the "impossible" pain of others. Ultimately, this study asks us to consider new practices for reading trauma literature that enlarges our conceptions of the human and the real.

Part One1. Mapping the Homeland of the Unknown: Trauma, Narrative, and
Posthuman Ethics2. A Sound Almost Human: The Open Wound,
Anti-Anthropocentric Authority, and Posthuman Identities in Faulkners Go
Down, Moses!Part Two3. A Piece of a World of Ghosts: Working-Through
Spectrality Studies and Racial Trauma in Toni Morrisons Beloved4. Animal
Sacraments: Trans-Subjective Animality in William Heyens Crazy Horse in
Stillness5. Posthuman Wounds: Traumatic Deferment and the Trans-Subjective
Soul in Philip K. Dicks Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?EpilogueTrauma
and the Fantastic
Tony M. Vici is an Assistant Professor of English at Ohio University-Chillicothe.