Review of „Embodying Contagion: The Viropolitics of Horror and Desire in Contemporary Discourse.“
edited by Sandra Becker, Megen de Bruin-Molé and Sara Polak.
WeiterlesenUn gènere canviant: la ciència-ficció alemanya / A Changing Genre: German Science Fiction
This article was written in English and then translated into Catalan for publication on Elbiblionauta.com by Sara Martín Alegre. Check out the translation here – LINK, or the English version:
WeiterlesenReview of The Monster Theory Reader
Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock, ed. The Monster Theory Reader. U of Minnesota P, 2020. Paperback, 600 pg. $35.00. ISBN 9781517905255.
If you subscribe to the theory that Mary Shelley is a key figure in the genesis of science fiction, then it is only a small step to claim that the figure of the monster is as central to science fiction as it is to horror.
WeiterlesenEmbodiment in Altered Carbon
Introduction
In her seminal book, How We Became Posthuman, N. Katherine Hayles discusses the connection of subjectivity and embodiment and warns her readers that “my nightmare is a culture inhabited by posthumans who regard their bodies as fashion accessories rather than the ground of being” (5).
WeiterlesenBiopunk: Genetik und die SF
Als Margaret Atwood bestimmte Trends in der naturwissenschaftlichen Forschung bemerkte, konnte sie als Autorin spekulativer Romane wohl nicht umhin, über die Konsequenzen dieser Trends nachzudenken. Denn die Forschung, etwa im Rahmen der Genetik, schien auf gefährliche Endpunkte hinauszulaufen, sollte man konsequent bestimmte Ideen bis zu ihrem logischen Ende weiterverfolgen.
WeiterlesenDie Burtonesque Charakterzeichnung in Rick Yanceys Coming-of-Age-Roman The Monstrumologist
Julia Gatermann und Lars Schmeink
Tim Burtons Stil ist so ikonisch, dass er zum Inbegriff einer individuellen Ästhetik geworden ist, die es sogar bereits in die popkulturelle Umgangssprache geschafft hat. Der Eintrag zu „Burtonesque“ im Urban Dictionary beschreibt seinen Stil als „imaginative and fantastical“, verankert zwischen Gothic, Horror, Legende und Märchen. Seine Filme seien „surreal, avant-garde and expressionistic, the tone of which is commonly described as ‘dark’ and ‘gothic’“.
WeiterlesenAkira and Ghost in the Shell (Case Study)
Martin de la Iglesia and Lars Schmeink
Up until the late 1980s, Japanese anime had gone mostly unnoticed in the west and it fell to cyberpunk film, specifically Katsuhiro Ōtomo’s Akira (1988) and Mamoru Oshii’s Ghost in the Shell (1995), to change the western perception of animated films forever.
WeiterlesenCyberpunk as Cultural Formation
Anna McFarlane, Graham J. Murphy, and Lars Schmeink
In his book The Seven Beauties of Science Fiction, Istvan Csicsery-Ronay argues that today’s social, political, and cultural realities have become science-fictional, that estrangement and dislocation constitute our habitual normalcy in the 21st century.
WeiterlesenDigital Effects in Cinema
1 – In his influential study Terminal Identity: The Virtual Subject in Postmodern Science Fiction, Scott Bukatman argues that “the real advent of cyberpunk, with the publication of [William Gibson’s] Neuromancer in 1984, was preceded by at least three films that, in varying ways, had a formative impact upon the cyberpunk aesthetic: Videodrome, Blade Runner,and TRON” (137).
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