Ectogenesis and Representations of Future Motherings in Helen Sedgwick’s The Growing Season

Jessica Aliaga-Lavrijsen
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

After the boom of feminist science fiction in the 1970s, many such novels have tackled the different sociocultural understandings of gender and sexual reproduction. Conventionally, patriarchal thinking tends to posit a biological explanation for gender inequality: women are supposed to be child bearers and the primary caregivers, whereas men should provide for the family through their work. However, if men could share procreation, would these views change? A recent work of fiction exploring this question from multiple perspectives is Helen Sedgwick’s The Growing Season (2017), a novel that presents a near future in which babies can be grown in artificial wombs that can be carried around. As an analysis of the novel will show, The Growing Season creatively explores the existing tensions among contemporary understandings of motherhood and feminism(s), as well as developments in reproductive biotechnology, through the different perspectives offered by the heterodiegetic third-person narration and multiple focalisation. Ultimately, the voices of the different characters in the novel convey a polyhedral vision of possible future feminist motherhood(s) where ideas of personal freedom and codependency are radically reconceptualised—a rethinking that becomes especially important nowadays, for the biotechnological elements of this fictional dystopia are already a reality.
海伦·塞奇威克《生长季节》中胚胎发生与未来母亲的表现
在20世纪70年代女权主义科幻小说热潮之后,许多此类小说都涉及对性别和有性生殖的不同社会文化理解。传统上,男权思想倾向于对性别不平等做出生物学上的解释:女性应该是孩子的生养者和主要的照顾者,而男性应该通过工作来养家糊口。然而,如果男性可以共同生育,这些观点会改变吗?海伦·塞奇威克(Helen Sedgwick)的《生长季节》(2017)是最近一部从多个角度探讨这个问题的小说,这部小说描绘了不久的将来,婴儿可以在可以随身携带的人造子宫中生长。通过对小说的分析,《生长季节》创造性地探索了当代对母性和女权主义的理解之间存在的紧张关系,以及生殖生物技术的发展,通过异质叙事的第三人称叙事和多重聚焦提供了不同的视角。最终,小说中不同角色的声音传达了未来女性主义母性的多面体愿景,在那里,个人自由和相互依赖的观念被彻底重新概念化——这种重新思考在今天变得尤为重要,因为这个虚构的反乌托邦的生物技术元素已经成为现实。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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