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El. knyga: Posthuman Capital and Biotechnology in Contemporary Novels

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This book examines several distinctive literary figurations of posthuman embodiment as they proliferate across a range of internationally acclaimed contemporary novels: clones in Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go, animal-human hybrids in Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake, toxic bodies in Indra Sinha’s Animal’s People, and cyborgs in Jeanette Winterson’s The Stone Gods. While these works explore the transformational power of the “biotech century,” they also foreground the key role human capital theory has played in framing human belonging as an aspirational category that is always and structurally just out of reach, making contemporary subjects never-human-enough. In these novels, the dystopian character of human capital theory is linked to fantasies of apocalyptic release. As such, these novels help expose how two interconnected genres of futurity (the dystopian and the apocalyptic) work in tandem to propel each other forward so that fears of global disaster become alibis for dystopian control, which, in turn, becomes the predicate for intensifying catastrophes. In analyzing these novels, Justin Omar Johnston draws attention to the entanglement of bodies in technological environments, economic networks, and deteriorating ecological settings. 


1 Introduction: The Biotech Century, Human Capital, and Genre
1(30)
From the "Biotech Century" to "Biology Is Technology"
4(11)
Be More Human and Human Capital Theory
15(7)
Genres of Futurity
22(6)
Bibliography
28(3)
2 Clones: Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go
31(36)
The Disciplinary Fence
35(5)
Species of Discipline
40(4)
The Open Fence
44(2)
The Service Station
46(2)
Affect and Climate Change in "England, Late 1990s"
48(3)
The Litter-ary Fence
51(8)
Becoming Posthuman Again
59(4)
Bibliography
63(4)
3 Animal-Human Hybrids: Margaret Atwood's Oryx and Crake
67(36)
The Tree of Life: Species, Evolution, and Patents
68(6)
Chickie Nobs: Repugnance and Neoliberal Families
74(9)
Corporate Domesticity: Animals in Heat
83(4)
Corporate Domesticity: Reproduction, Maternity, and Escape
87(1)
Corporate Domesticity: Videos, Bodies, and the Domestic Tree ho use
88(5)
Oryx and Genre
93(7)
Bibliography
100(3)
4 Toxic Bodies: Indra Sinha's Animal's People
103(30)
Neoliberalism, Environmental Technologies, and Human Capital
108(6)
In the Shadow of Human Rights
114(2)
Tragic Accidents and Human Extras
116(4)
The Human Element
120(4)
Ambivalence: Humanism and "Something Different"
124(6)
Bibliography
130(3)
5 Cyborgs: Jeanette Winterson's The Stone Gods
133(28)
The Stone Gods: Planet Orbus and Planet Blue
138(3)
Unlimited Finitude and Cyborg Feminism
141(8)
Unexceptional Exceptions and Easter Island
149(4)
The Biopolitics of Evolutionary Time
153(6)
Bibliography
159(2)
6 Coda: Genres of Futurity
161(12)
Genre and Bewilderment
165(8)
Bibliography 173(2)
Index 175
Justin Omar Johnston is Assistant Professor in the English Department at Stony Brook University, USA, where he teaches classes on contemporary and Anglophone novels, Science and Literature, and biopolitics. He is an organizing member of the New Environmentalisms seminar and the Wicked Problems podcast series. His work has appeared in Twentieth-Century Literature, Diesis, and Masculinities.