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Wild Child: Intensive Parenting and Posthumanist Ethics

(Hardback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Wild Child: Intensive Parenting and Posthumanist Ethics

Contributors:

By (Author) Naomi Morgenstern

ISBN:

9781517903787

Publisher:

University of Minnesota Press

Imprint:

University of Minnesota Press

Publication Date:

8th May 2018

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Age groups: children

Dewey:

813.6093523

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

280

Dimensions:

Width 140mm, Height 216mm, Spine 38mm

Description

Exploring how the figure of the wild child in contemporary fiction grapples with contemporary cultural anxieties about reproductive ethics and the future of humanity

In the eighteenth century, Western philosophy positioned the figure of the child at the border between untamed nature and rational adulthood. Contemporary cultural anxieties about the ethics and politics of reproductive choice and the crisis of parental responsibility have freighted this liminal figure with new meaning in twenty-first-century narratives.

In Wild Child, Naomi Morgenstern explores depictions of children and their adult caregivers in extreme situationsranging from the violence of slavery and sexual captivity to accidental death, mass murder, torture, and global apocalypsein such works as Toni Morrisons A Mercy, Cormac McCarthys The Road, Lionel Shrivers We Need to Talk about Kevin, Emma Donoghues Room, and Denis Villeneuves 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. In the face of an uncertain future that no longer confirms the confidence of patriarchal humanism, such narratives displace or project present-day apprehensions about maternal sacrifice and paternal protection onto the wildness of children in a series of hyperbolically violent scenes.

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.

Reviews

"Your child isnt civilized. Neither are you. Expect the child to be more productively destructive and survivalist than you imagined, showing us to be the techno-relational-vulnerable animals that we are, strange to the core in crisis and change. Also expect that you wont find a smarter, more forthright, and beautifully nuanced guide to these thoughts than Naomi Morgenstern. Impressive and persuasive."Kathryn Bond Stockton, author of The Queer Child, or Growing Sideways in the Twentieth Century

"Wild Child is a brilliant and thoroughly engaging study of reproductive ethics and the ethics of parenting in narratives of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Naomi Morgenstern's command of theoretical texts, both philosophical and psychoanalytic, is prodigious, and her writing style is vibrantat once theoretically complex and alive with personal twists and turns of language."Jean Wyatt, author of Love and Narrative Form in Toni Morrison's Later Novels

Author Bio

Naomi Morgenstern is associate professor of English at the University of Toronto.

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