From Metaphor to Metamorph? On Science Fiction and the Ethics of Transformative Encounters |
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Authors: | Ingvil Hellstrand |
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Institution: | Network for Gender Studies, University of Stavanger, Stavanger, Norway |
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Abstract: | This article explores how the science-fictional figure of the metamorph can serve as a feminist figuration, a tool for rethinking structures for determining sameness and difference. The article offers close readings of selected metamorphs in contemporary science fiction and connects these imaginaries/imageries to recent feminist debates about representation, materiality, and agency. I suggest that contemporary metamorphs in visual science fiction open up space for a consideration of changeability and flexibility rather than fixity when issues of identity and ontology—of being in the world—are at stake. In light of the current political situation, where mass migration to Europe is foregrounding the fundamental differentiation between Self and Other, this article invites a discussion of the ethics at stake in the potentially transformative encounter between “us” and “them”, and the political potential of rethinking representation and signification through the figure of the metamorph. |
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Keywords: | Science fiction Otherness post-conventional ethics metamorph metaphor post-constructionist turn feminist figuration |
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