Posthumanist Strategies of Forming Surrogate Cyborg Subjectivity in Contemporary Young Adult Autism Novels

Posthumanist themes are usually worked in speculative genres such as biotechnological science fiction. This paper demonstrates the potentiality of realistic young adult autism fiction for exploring posthumanist ideas. By highlighting the parallels between autistic sense of self and the posthumanist...

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Main Authors: Mahboubeh Farhangi, Laleh Atashi, Farideh Pourgiv
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Kurdistan 2022-05-01
Series:Critical Literary Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://cls.uok.ac.ir/article_62212.html
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author Mahboubeh Farhangi
Laleh Atashi
Farideh Pourgiv
author_facet Mahboubeh Farhangi
Laleh Atashi
Farideh Pourgiv
author_sort Mahboubeh Farhangi
collection DOAJ
description Posthumanist themes are usually worked in speculative genres such as biotechnological science fiction. This paper demonstrates the potentiality of realistic young adult autism fiction for exploring posthumanist ideas. By highlighting the parallels between autistic sense of self and the posthumanist conception of subjectivity, we argue that autism young adult novels have the potentiality to re-conceptualize adolescence and subjectification in ways that diverge from the dominant humanistic paradigm of traditional young adult novels. Unlike traditional young adult novels, these autism novels depict adolescence as the period in which the individual leaves the illusion of autonomy behind, and becomes aware of his status as relational and inextricably tied to other subjectivities. These novels demonstrate that subjectification is a collective process whereby the individual emerges as an agential subject only in relation to other subjectivities. In order to illustrate our point we analyze Nothing is Right and Imaginary Friends, two novels by the autistic writer Michael Scott Monje, Jr. This paper proposes that this process relies on posthumanist premises of relationality, deconstruction of self/other binary and acknowledgment of difference as a constituent of selfhood.
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spelling doaj.art-f05a33f91ed54fedb66f3d6f90346b1b2022-12-22T01:48:53ZengUniversity of KurdistanCritical Literary Studies2676-699X2716-99282022-05-0142213610.34785/J014.2022.191Posthumanist Strategies of Forming Surrogate Cyborg Subjectivity in Contemporary Young Adult Autism NovelsMahboubeh Farhangi0Laleh Atashi1Farideh Pourgiv2PhD Candidate of English Literature, Shiraz University, Shiraz, IranAssistant Professor of English Literature, Shiraz University, Shiraz, IranProfessor of English Literature, Shiraz University, Shiraz University, Shiraz, IranPosthumanist themes are usually worked in speculative genres such as biotechnological science fiction. This paper demonstrates the potentiality of realistic young adult autism fiction for exploring posthumanist ideas. By highlighting the parallels between autistic sense of self and the posthumanist conception of subjectivity, we argue that autism young adult novels have the potentiality to re-conceptualize adolescence and subjectification in ways that diverge from the dominant humanistic paradigm of traditional young adult novels. Unlike traditional young adult novels, these autism novels depict adolescence as the period in which the individual leaves the illusion of autonomy behind, and becomes aware of his status as relational and inextricably tied to other subjectivities. These novels demonstrate that subjectification is a collective process whereby the individual emerges as an agential subject only in relation to other subjectivities. In order to illustrate our point we analyze Nothing is Right and Imaginary Friends, two novels by the autistic writer Michael Scott Monje, Jr. This paper proposes that this process relies on posthumanist premises of relationality, deconstruction of self/other binary and acknowledgment of difference as a constituent of selfhood.https://cls.uok.ac.ir/article_62212.htmlposthumanismsubjectificationautobiographynothing is rightimaginary friends
spellingShingle Mahboubeh Farhangi
Laleh Atashi
Farideh Pourgiv
Posthumanist Strategies of Forming Surrogate Cyborg Subjectivity in Contemporary Young Adult Autism Novels
Critical Literary Studies
posthumanism
subjectification
autobiography
nothing is right
imaginary friends
title Posthumanist Strategies of Forming Surrogate Cyborg Subjectivity in Contemporary Young Adult Autism Novels
title_full Posthumanist Strategies of Forming Surrogate Cyborg Subjectivity in Contemporary Young Adult Autism Novels
title_fullStr Posthumanist Strategies of Forming Surrogate Cyborg Subjectivity in Contemporary Young Adult Autism Novels
title_full_unstemmed Posthumanist Strategies of Forming Surrogate Cyborg Subjectivity in Contemporary Young Adult Autism Novels
title_short Posthumanist Strategies of Forming Surrogate Cyborg Subjectivity in Contemporary Young Adult Autism Novels
title_sort posthumanist strategies of forming surrogate cyborg subjectivity in contemporary young adult autism novels
topic posthumanism
subjectification
autobiography
nothing is right
imaginary friends
url https://cls.uok.ac.ir/article_62212.html
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AT lalehatashi posthumaniststrategiesofformingsurrogatecyborgsubjectivityincontemporaryyoungadultautismnovels
AT faridehpourgiv posthumaniststrategiesofformingsurrogatecyborgsubjectivityincontemporaryyoungadultautismnovels