Becoming nothing, becoming everything : quantum posthumanism and the writing of J.M. Coetzee

Drawing on both posthumanism and quantum theory, this thesis introduces what I am calling a framework of quantum posthumanism. Based on the epistemic and ontic aspects of entanglement, nonseparability, and becoming, and a reworking of ideas of agency and objectivity, the thesis embarks on an interdi...

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Main Author: Al-Hamed, Hajer Saud
Published: Durham University 2017
Subjects:
823
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.721042
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7210422019-01-29T03:20:30ZBecoming nothing, becoming everything : quantum posthumanism and the writing of J.M. CoetzeeAl-Hamed, Hajer Saud2017Drawing on both posthumanism and quantum theory, this thesis introduces what I am calling a framework of quantum posthumanism. Based on the epistemic and ontic aspects of entanglement, nonseparability, and becoming, and a reworking of ideas of agency and objectivity, the thesis embarks on an interdisciplinary (entangled) reading of J. M. Coetzee’s texts that seeks to move beyond the current historicist framing of his work. Utilising some of the key concepts and laws from various quantum interpretations, it seeks to show how such concepts effectively deconstruct boundaries between self/other, human/animal, animate/inanimate, body/environment and therefore, by extension to the literary, between fact/fiction, story/history, external/internal, and ultimately author/character/reader/text. The thesis approaches Coetzee’s writing by focussing on the centrality in his fiction of becoming, not only on the level of characters, but also in terms of the agencies of meaning within the literary event (the transactions amongst reader, author, and text). Quantum posthumanism deconstructs the fixed role and positionality of the external observer/Cartesian subject, represented as the reader/author outside the literary event. It proposes the term phenomenon of meaning to address the entanglement of reader/text/author that become part of the meaning they claim to own. The thesis also challenges traditional uses of concepts such as time, linearity, and origin with quantum posthumanist ideas such as multiplicity, emergence, contingency, and parallelism. Finally, through the framework of quantum posthumanism, the thesis hopes to support the argument for the entanglement of human knowledge and the detrimental illusion of the divide between the humanities and the sciences by demonstrating and exemplifying how inevitably entangled human knowledge is.823Durham Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.721042http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/12279/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 823
spellingShingle 823
Al-Hamed, Hajer Saud
Becoming nothing, becoming everything : quantum posthumanism and the writing of J.M. Coetzee
description Drawing on both posthumanism and quantum theory, this thesis introduces what I am calling a framework of quantum posthumanism. Based on the epistemic and ontic aspects of entanglement, nonseparability, and becoming, and a reworking of ideas of agency and objectivity, the thesis embarks on an interdisciplinary (entangled) reading of J. M. Coetzee’s texts that seeks to move beyond the current historicist framing of his work. Utilising some of the key concepts and laws from various quantum interpretations, it seeks to show how such concepts effectively deconstruct boundaries between self/other, human/animal, animate/inanimate, body/environment and therefore, by extension to the literary, between fact/fiction, story/history, external/internal, and ultimately author/character/reader/text. The thesis approaches Coetzee’s writing by focussing on the centrality in his fiction of becoming, not only on the level of characters, but also in terms of the agencies of meaning within the literary event (the transactions amongst reader, author, and text). Quantum posthumanism deconstructs the fixed role and positionality of the external observer/Cartesian subject, represented as the reader/author outside the literary event. It proposes the term phenomenon of meaning to address the entanglement of reader/text/author that become part of the meaning they claim to own. The thesis also challenges traditional uses of concepts such as time, linearity, and origin with quantum posthumanist ideas such as multiplicity, emergence, contingency, and parallelism. Finally, through the framework of quantum posthumanism, the thesis hopes to support the argument for the entanglement of human knowledge and the detrimental illusion of the divide between the humanities and the sciences by demonstrating and exemplifying how inevitably entangled human knowledge is.
author Al-Hamed, Hajer Saud
author_facet Al-Hamed, Hajer Saud
author_sort Al-Hamed, Hajer Saud
title Becoming nothing, becoming everything : quantum posthumanism and the writing of J.M. Coetzee
title_short Becoming nothing, becoming everything : quantum posthumanism and the writing of J.M. Coetzee
title_full Becoming nothing, becoming everything : quantum posthumanism and the writing of J.M. Coetzee
title_fullStr Becoming nothing, becoming everything : quantum posthumanism and the writing of J.M. Coetzee
title_full_unstemmed Becoming nothing, becoming everything : quantum posthumanism and the writing of J.M. Coetzee
title_sort becoming nothing, becoming everything : quantum posthumanism and the writing of j.m. coetzee
publisher Durham University
publishDate 2017
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.721042
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