Technology and identity in young adult fiction : the posthuman subject / Victoria Flanagan.
- Title
- Technology and identity in young adult fiction : the posthuman subject / Victoria Flanagan.
- Published by
- Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2014.
- Author
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Status | Format | Access | Call number | Item location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Status | FormatText | AccessRequest in advance | Call numberPN3443 .F57 2014 | Item locationOff-site |
Details
- Description
- viii, 205 pages; 23 cm.
- Summary
- "Technology and Identity in Young Adult Fiction examines the textual representation of technology in young adult fiction in a way that has rarely been attempted before. It is not a historical study or a survey of narrative plots, but instead takes a more conceptual approach that engages with the central ideas of posthumanism: such as the fragmented nature of posthuman identity, the concept of agency as distributed and collective and the role of embodiment in understandings of selfhood. Arguing that Young Adult fiction is on the cusp of a substantive paradigm shift, this book analyses the novels of emerging authors such as Cory Doctorow, Marissa Meyer and Mary E. Pearson. It demonstrates that these emerging writers are increasingly representing technology in a positive light that clearly resonates with posthumanism's interest in how technology can produce new and innovative forms of selfhood and identity"--
- Series statement
- Critical approaches to children's literature
- Uniform title
- Critical approaches to children's literature.
- Subject
- Young adult fiction > History and criticism
- Technology in literature
- Identity (Psychology) in literature
- Self in literature
- LITERARY CRITICISM / Children's Literature
- Young adult fiction
- BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Literary
- Identitet i litteraturen
- Posthumanism i litteraturen
- Teknik i litteraturen
- Ungdomsböcker
- Genre/Form
- Criticism, interpretation, etc.
- Contents
- Introduction -- 1. Posthumanism in Young Adult Fiction -- 2. Narrating Posthuman Subjectivity -- 3. Digital Citizenship in the Posthuman Era -- 4. Reworking the Female Subject: Technology and the Body -- 5. Surveillance Societies: Privacy and Power in YA fiction -- 6. Subjectivity in Cyberspace: Techno-realism and the Merging of Virtual and Material Selves -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index.
- Owning institution
- Harvard Library
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Processing action (note)
- committed to retain