可怕的女性,殖民身体,莫罗博士:超人类主义,种族资本主义,以及关于无母出生的投机小说

J. Tyner
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引用次数: 1

摘要

通过阅读h·g·威尔斯19世纪的反乌托邦小说《莫罗博士岛》,我借鉴了可怕的女性概念,试图重新思考人类世的超人类主义,并随后为“妊娠地理学”的理论化做出了贡献。更准确地说,我在威尔斯的思辨小说中发现了一个思考种族、阶级、性别和性行为的交叉点的机会,这些交叉点在更广泛的生殖政治中被调解。为此,我的目标是双重的。首先,我质疑莫罗的(再)生产性劳动,即活体解剖师所做的体力劳动和他的实验意图。在这样做的过程中,我强调了莫罗活动的政治经济学,并强调了种族资本主义、殖民主义和奴隶制的交织。接下来,我重新塑造了莫罗的主体地位。在这里,我认为莫罗体现了畸形女性的一种反常形式,因为他试图用机器取代母性,这是一种为了理性生物生产而对生殖沧桑的男性主义挪用。作为结论,我认为莫罗,类似于当代的超人类主义者,试图完善进化,消除性繁殖的不确定性和不可预测性,为此,莫罗体现了以生产领域为中心的男性主义科学的愿望,以吸收女性的生产能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The monstrous-feminine, the colonial body, and Dr. Moreau: transhumanism, racial capitalism, and the speculative fiction of motherless birth
Abstract Through a reading of H.G. Wells’ nineteenth-century dystopian novel, The Island of Dr. Moreau, I draw on the concept of the monstrous feminine in an attempt to rethink transhumanism in the Anthropocene and subsequently contribute to the theorization of ‘gestational geographies’. More precisely, I find in Wells’ speculative fiction an opportunity to think through the intersection of race, class, gender, and sexuality as mediated in broader reproductive politics. To that end, my objectives are two-fold. First, I interrogate the (re)productive labors of Moreau, that is, the physical work performed by the vivisectionist and the intent of his experimentations. In so doing I underscore the political economy of Moreau’s activities and emphasize the imbrication of racial capitalism, colonialism, and slavery. Next, I recast the subject-position of Moreau. Here, I argue that Moreau embodies a perverse form of the monstrous feminine as he attempts to replace the maternal with the machine, a masculinist appropriation of the vicissitudes of reproduction for the purpose of rational biological production. By way of conclusions, I argue that Moreau, similar to contemporary transhumanists, sought to perfect upon evolution and to eliminate the indeterminacy and unpredictability of sexual reproduction and, to that end, Moreau personifies the desire of a masculinist science centered on the sphere of production to coopt women’s productive capabilities.
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