The Cambridge Introduction to Literary Posthumanism
At a time when scholars in both literary and scientific disciplines are advancing the term posthumanism, this book offers a through-line. Beginning with Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and continuing into the post-print, born-digital excursions of Shelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl, this literary introduction defines posthumanism and provides a summary account of the key literary and cultural theorists in the field. It embraces humanist refusals from Melville's Bartelby to Thomas Pynchon's authorial surrogation, and more recent evasions and avoidances in the writing of William Gibson, Tom McCarthy, Coleson Whitehead, Jeanette Winterson, and Claire-Louise Bennett. This book also provides close readings of key posthuman fiction, poetry, and conceptual approaches that help ground the discipline.
- Distinguishes literary and critical posthumanism from speculative concerns with singularities and transhuman enhancements
- Brings in key formulations of posthuman approaches from scientific and technological fields of study
- Offers close readings of key posthuman fiction, poetry, and conceptual approaches that help ground the discipline
Reviews & endorsements
‘Tabbi's work is both a primer in literary posthumanism and a snapshot of where it is at this moment.… Recommended.’ G. D. MacDonald, CHOICE
Product details
December 2024Adobe eBook Reader
9781009256483
0 pages
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: not just another period
- 1. Beyond the Two Cultures?
- 2. Mary Shelley's modern and Shelley Jackson's postmodern Prometheus
- 3. Post-periodization
- 4. Posthuman sublime
- 5. Ah Bartleby, ah humanities! from transcendentalism to posthumanism
- 6. The posthuman imagination in contemporary literature
- 7. Posthuman epic in the era of AI
- 8. Interlude: N. Katherine Hayles and the cognitive turn in literary posthumanism
- 9. Digital posthumanism (on the periphery)
- Epilogue: platform post(?) pandemic
- A collaborative glossary of terms (in process)
- Works cited
- Index.