Evil Twin/Singing Like a Bird (WisCon 31 papers): Difference between revisions
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* [[Evil Twin/Singing Like a Bird (WisCon 31 papers)|31 The Evil Twin Must Die: The Idea of | * [[Evil Twin/Singing Like a Bird (WisCon 31 papers)|31 The Evil Twin Must Die: The Idea of the Collective in Science Fiction and Fantasy/ Singing Like a Bird: The Articulate Silence of Sarah Canary]] | ||
Academic Papers•Conference Room 3• Friday, 8:45-10:00 p.m. | Academic Papers•Conference Room 3• Friday, 8:45-10:00 p.m. | ||
1) Using works by [[Ursula K. Le Guin]], [[Arthur C. Clark]], [[Monique Wittig]], and [[Orson Scott Card]], as well as [[Walter Benjamin]], [[Gayatri Spivak]], and [[Carl Jung]], this paper will explore the way fantastic literature expresses the struggle between individuals and collectives. Characters in science fiction and fantasy that are twins, [[clones]], or share a [[collective consciousness]] typically follow certain patterns within this general preference for individualism. This essay will discuss particular twins and collectives within works of the fantastic in order to show the more general biases of our society, but will also discuss works that subvert these stereotypes, such as [[Monique Wittig]]’s feminine collective in ''[[Les Guérillères]]''. — [[Nicole Minnerly]] | 1) '''The Evil Twin Must Die: The Idea of the Collective in Science Fiction and Fantasy''' / [[Nicolle Minnerly]]. - Using works by [[Ursula K. Le Guin]], [[Arthur C. Clark]], [[Monique Wittig]], and [[Orson Scott Card]], as well as [[Walter Benjamin]], [[Gayatri Spivak]], and [[Carl Jung]], this paper will explore the way fantastic literature expresses the struggle between individuals and collectives. Characters in science fiction and fantasy that are twins, [[clones]], or share a [[collective consciousness]] typically follow certain patterns within this general preference for individualism. This essay will discuss particular twins and collectives within works of the fantastic in order to show the more general biases of our society, but will also discuss works that subvert these stereotypes, such as [[Monique Wittig]]’s feminine collective in ''[[Les Guérillères]]''. — [[Nicole Minnerly]] | ||
2) In [[Karen Joy Fowler]]'s ''[[Sarah Canary]]'' the eponymous character cannot speak a language recognizable to those who encounter her, and seems to have sprung out of nowhere. The absence of history and her inability to articulate her own story prompts those who meet her to invest her with their own hopes, fears and need for an answer. This paper will look at Sarah Canary and ''[[Sister Noon]]'', also by Karen Joy Fowler, as well as other selected stories, to consider the feral and that which cannot explain itself, and their effect on those who come in contact with them. — [[Maureen Kincaid Speller]] | 2) '''Singing Like a Bird: The Articulate Silence of Sarah Canary''' / [[Maureen Kincaid Speller]]. In [[Karen Joy Fowler]]'s ''[[Sarah Canary]]'' the eponymous character cannot speak a language recognizable to those who encounter her, and seems to have sprung out of nowhere. The absence of history and her inability to articulate her own story prompts those who meet her to invest her with their own hopes, fears and need for an answer. This paper will look at Sarah Canary and ''[[Sister Noon]]'', also by Karen Joy Fowler, as well as other selected stories, to consider the feral and that which cannot explain itself, and their effect on those who come in contact with them. — [[Maureen Kincaid Speller]] | ||
Nicolle Minnerly, Maureen Kincaid Speller | Nicolle Minnerly, Maureen Kincaid Speller | ||
[[Category:WisCon 31 papers]] | [[Category:WisCon 31 papers]] | ||
[[category:Works of feminist SF studies]] | |||
[[category:2007 publications]] | |||
Latest revision as of 13:18, 11 November 2010
Academic Papers•Conference Room 3• Friday, 8:45-10:00 p.m.
1) The Evil Twin Must Die: The Idea of the Collective in Science Fiction and Fantasy / Nicolle Minnerly. - Using works by Ursula K. Le Guin, Arthur C. Clark, Monique Wittig, and Orson Scott Card, as well as Walter Benjamin, Gayatri Spivak, and Carl Jung, this paper will explore the way fantastic literature expresses the struggle between individuals and collectives. Characters in science fiction and fantasy that are twins, clones, or share a collective consciousness typically follow certain patterns within this general preference for individualism. This essay will discuss particular twins and collectives within works of the fantastic in order to show the more general biases of our society, but will also discuss works that subvert these stereotypes, such as Monique Wittig’s feminine collective in Les Guérillères. — Nicole Minnerly
2) Singing Like a Bird: The Articulate Silence of Sarah Canary / Maureen Kincaid Speller. In Karen Joy Fowler's Sarah Canary the eponymous character cannot speak a language recognizable to those who encounter her, and seems to have sprung out of nowhere. The absence of history and her inability to articulate her own story prompts those who meet her to invest her with their own hopes, fears and need for an answer. This paper will look at Sarah Canary and Sister Noon, also by Karen Joy Fowler, as well as other selected stories, to consider the feral and that which cannot explain itself, and their effect on those who come in contact with them. — Maureen Kincaid Speller
Nicolle Minnerly, Maureen Kincaid Speller