Split. A Dystopian Vision of Transhuman Enhancement. Speciesist and Political Issues Intersecting Trauma and Disability
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/97476Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Routledge
Materia
Transhumanism Disability Trauma 9/11 Speciesism
Fecha
2021Referencia bibliográfica
“Split. A Dystopian Vision of Transhuman Enhancement. Speciesist and Political Issues Intersecting Trauma and Disability” Transhumanism and Posthumanism in Twenty-First Century Narrative. Ed. Sonia Baelo and Mónica Calvo. Routledge, 2021, pp 142-160.
Patrocinador
“Trauma, Cultura y Posthumanidad: La Definición del Ser en la Narrativa Norteamericana Actual” (FFI2015-63506P)Resumen
M. Night Shyamalan’s Split (2017) renders a dystopian vision of transhumanity as the result of this imposed label of disability on a pathologised human identity that is viewed as fragmentary and dysfunctional. The transhumanist interpellation to evolve from this physically and psychologically incomplete, merely human condition results, in Night Shyamalan’s film, into a Transhuman superhumanity that is dystopically portrayed as monstrous by revealing the violent, savage drive in transhumanist evolutionary logic. Interpreting Split as a national allegory of the causes, discourses and policies developing around the national trauma of 9/11, renders a complex dystopian image blending trauma, disability