James Island and Biocentrism as Utopia in “El dios de Darwin” of Sabina Berman Cover Image

La isla de James y el biocentrismo como utopía en “El dios de Darwin” de Sabina Berman
James Island and Biocentrism as Utopia in “El dios de Darwin” of Sabina Berman

Author(s): Eduardo E. Parrilla Sotomayor
Subject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Studies of Literature, Other Language Literature, Theory of Literature
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego
Keywords: Darwin; natural morality; planetary ethics; Sabina Berman

Summary/Abstract: In this article I delve into a recently published novel, “El dios de Darwin” (2014), written by Sabina Berman. Its purpose revolves around the utopic implications of the author´s esthetic project. First, I examine the relationship between the two plots which are intertwined in the novel. One of them takes place nowadays, around 2012; the other happens in 1876, in the decline of Darwin’s life, since he is the main character. “El dios de Darwin” is the story of a secret document found in Westminster Abbey by Antonio Márquez, a zoologist. A moment before his murder by a fundamentalist cell in Dubai, he attains to send by email fragments of the secret document to three other pro-evolutionist friends. One of them is Karen Nieto, the main character of the contemporary plot. Struggling against Franco, Márquez’s former lover, who was a spy of a fundamentalist organization, Nieto at the end manages to rescue the secret document, he attempted to destroy. Within the second plot, the secret document (“Theological Autobiography”) and the circumstances of it being written by Darwin are interspersed until the end. The “Autobiography” was verily brought to light from censorship by Nora Barlow (1995), Darwin’s greatgranddaughter. The story unravels the unknown conversion to agnosticism experienced by the British naturalist. Since the novel is rich enough in scientific data and demonstrations extracted from The Origins of Species, The Descend of Man and the authentic Autobiography, I establish a parallelism between Darwin’s revolutionary contribution and the set of ideas about planetary ethics posed by the Brazilian theologian, Leonardo Boff.

  • Issue Year: 2015
  • Issue No: 10
  • Page Range: 282-291
  • Page Count: 10
  • Language: Spanish