Cyborg visions : Mitchell, Ishiguro, Winterson and the negotiation of modernity

The objective of this paper was to examine a selection of contemporary utopian texts by David Mitchell, Jeanette Winterson and Kazuo Ishiguro in an effort to understand how their alternative realities might address man’s amalgamation of postmodern identities. In the texts, the human protagonists at...

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Main Author: Williams, Tammi Lynn
Language:English
Published: The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong) 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10722/192959
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spelling ndltd-HKU-oai-hub.hku.hk-10722-1929592015-07-29T04:02:17Z Cyborg visions : Mitchell, Ishiguro, Winterson and the negotiation of modernity Williams, Tammi Lynn Utopias in literature The objective of this paper was to examine a selection of contemporary utopian texts by David Mitchell, Jeanette Winterson and Kazuo Ishiguro in an effort to understand how their alternative realities might address man’s amalgamation of postmodern identities. In the texts, the human protagonists attempted to cast the pastoral landscapes of their youth as sites of safety and sanctity in order to sustain their modern reality, yet their attempts to return to or embrace the pastoral were a failure in part because of the intrusion of modernity into the spaces and in part because they themselves had become modern entities. The posthumans in these texts, including cyborgs, clones and robo sapiens, were emblematic creatures that served a dual role. They were both the subservient foundation of the utopias in these stories, as well as reflections of the postmodern human condition, which was artificially reliant on religion and consumerism for its modes of identity. Each of these texts yielded one particular voice that embodied and celebrated the postmodern experience and the hybridity that is an innate part of it. These characters functioned as important models of negotiation, providing a constructive bridge to the postmodern future for humanity, whether they worked within the societal systems of their eras in order to seek change or rebelled from society, fighting the classifications that defined their identities. published_or_final_version English Studies Master Master of Arts 2013-12-14T06:23:20Z 2013-12-14T06:23:20Z 2013 2013 PG_Thesis 10.5353/th_b5091098 b5091098 http://hdl.handle.net/10722/192959 eng HKU Theses Online (HKUTO) Creative Commons: Attribution 3.0 Hong Kong License The author retains all proprietary rights, (such as patent rights) and the right to use in future works. The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong)
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Utopias in literature
spellingShingle Utopias in literature
Williams, Tammi Lynn
Cyborg visions : Mitchell, Ishiguro, Winterson and the negotiation of modernity
description The objective of this paper was to examine a selection of contemporary utopian texts by David Mitchell, Jeanette Winterson and Kazuo Ishiguro in an effort to understand how their alternative realities might address man’s amalgamation of postmodern identities. In the texts, the human protagonists attempted to cast the pastoral landscapes of their youth as sites of safety and sanctity in order to sustain their modern reality, yet their attempts to return to or embrace the pastoral were a failure in part because of the intrusion of modernity into the spaces and in part because they themselves had become modern entities. The posthumans in these texts, including cyborgs, clones and robo sapiens, were emblematic creatures that served a dual role. They were both the subservient foundation of the utopias in these stories, as well as reflections of the postmodern human condition, which was artificially reliant on religion and consumerism for its modes of identity. Each of these texts yielded one particular voice that embodied and celebrated the postmodern experience and the hybridity that is an innate part of it. These characters functioned as important models of negotiation, providing a constructive bridge to the postmodern future for humanity, whether they worked within the societal systems of their eras in order to seek change or rebelled from society, fighting the classifications that defined their identities. === published_or_final_version === English Studies === Master === Master of Arts
author Williams, Tammi Lynn
author_facet Williams, Tammi Lynn
author_sort Williams, Tammi Lynn
title Cyborg visions : Mitchell, Ishiguro, Winterson and the negotiation of modernity
title_short Cyborg visions : Mitchell, Ishiguro, Winterson and the negotiation of modernity
title_full Cyborg visions : Mitchell, Ishiguro, Winterson and the negotiation of modernity
title_fullStr Cyborg visions : Mitchell, Ishiguro, Winterson and the negotiation of modernity
title_full_unstemmed Cyborg visions : Mitchell, Ishiguro, Winterson and the negotiation of modernity
title_sort cyborg visions : mitchell, ishiguro, winterson and the negotiation of modernity
publisher The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong)
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10722/192959
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