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Removing an organ from one (typically dead) body and placing it in another living body challenges our most foundational ideas about boundaries between self and other, individual and social identity, life and death, health and illness. But despite these transgressions, organ transplant is a celebrated and relatively common procedure. Transplant Fictions brings together a diverse set of cultural representations to understand how we have overcome the profound ideological violations represented by organ exchange in order to reimagine the concept and practice as technological and moral victories. From the plots of horror stories and sci-fi novels to sentimental romances and feel-good media reports of stranger donation, this cultural study offers a nuanced portrait of the conceptual journey of organ exchange from strange and terrible to the gift of life.
Constructs a cultural history of organ exchange Offers extended readings of widely studied authors including William Faulkner, Kazuo Ishiguro, Mary Shelley, Chris Abani and H. G. Wells's The Island of Dr. Moreau Identifies three genressentiment, horror, and romanceas the formal conventions by which we make sense of transplantation in practice
Auteur
Emily Russell is an Associate Professor of English at Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida, USA. She is the author of Reading Embodied Citizenship: Disability, Narrative, and the Body Politic (2011).
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