Dehumanizing Discourses: Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam Trilogy on Post-Humans
Dehumanizing Discourses: Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam Trilogy on Post-Humans
Author(s): Izabela PorębaSubject(s): Ethics / Practical Philosophy, Aesthetics, Other Language Literature, Theory of Literature, Sociology of Literature
Published by: Uniwersytet Adama Mickiewicza
Keywords: Margaret Atwood; non-humans; postcolonialism; childism; MaddAddam; animalization;
Summary/Abstract: This paper examines four discursive strategies: colonizing, animalizing, infantalizing and (plant) vegetative that characters in Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam trilogy use to name the Crakers, post-humans with modified DNA structure. In discussing them, I expose a dehumanizing effect this seemingly neutral processes of naming and describing have. The interpretative findings discussed in this paper constitute a response to largely anthropocentrically oriented extensive criticism on Atwood’s writing. By questioning the neutrality of the narrative through a postcolonial reading of the trilogy, I argue that MaddAddam challenges the divisions between human and non-human. The paper investigates whether these dehumanizing discursive tactics of animalization, colonization, infantilism or vegetation, which are fundamentally oppressive, can become a means of resistance.
Journal: Przestrzenie Teorii
- Issue Year: 2023
- Issue No: 39
- Page Range: 195-219
- Page Count: 25
- Language: English