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Wild child : intensive parenting and posthumanist ethics / Naomi Morgenstern.

Van Pelt Library BD450 .M67 2018
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Morgenstern, Naomi, 1965- author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Philosophical anthropology.
Feral children in literature.
Physical Description:
278 pages : illustration ; 22 cm
Place of Publication:
Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, [2018]
Summary:
In Wild child, Naomi Morgenstern explores depictions of children and their adult caregivers in extreme situations - ranging from the violence of slavery and sexual captivity to accidental death, mass murder, torture, and global apocalypse - in such works as Toni Morrison's A mercy, Cormac McCarthy's The road, Lionel Shriver's We need to talk about Kevin, Emma Donoghue's Room, and Denis Villeneuve's film Prisoners. Morgenstern shows how, in such narratives, "wild" children function as symptoms of new ethical crises and existential fears raised by transformations in the technology and politics of reproduction and by increased ethical questions about the very decision to reproduce. Urgent and engaging, Wild child offers the only extended consideration of how twenty-first century fiction has begun to imagine the decision to reproduce and the ethical challenges of posthumanist parenting.
Contents:
Introduction: the posthumanist wild child
Is there a space of maternal ethics? Emma Donoghue's Room
Postapocalyptic responsibility: patriarchy at the end of the world in Cormac McCarthy's The road
Maternal love/maternal violence: inventing ethics in Toni Morrison's A mercy
"Monstrous decision": destruction and relation in Lionel Shriver's We need to talk about Kevin
"Dis-ap-peared": endangered children in Denis Villeneuve's Prisoners and Alice Munro's "Miles City, Montana"
Afterword: the pretense of the human from Victor of Aveyron to Nim Chimpsky.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
1517903785
9781517903787
1517903793
9781517903794
OCLC:
1007311442

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