The Body: Difference between revisions
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Feminist SF has often focused on the body, grounding stories in bodily reality; or tackling the association of women with nature, the earth, and bodies; or taking on sexist perceptions of women's bodies. | |||
Particular topics include: | |||
* [[Body image and beauty standards]] | |||
* [[Fat]] - Fat women as characters, particularly point-of-view or sympathetic characters, is all too rare; questions of dieting, eating, and weight are related | |||
* [[Body modification]] - Since [[Donna Haraway]] dropped a bomb on the critical/theoretical community with "[[The Cyborg Manifesto]]", body modification to accommodate technology has been a staple consideration of theory as well as of cyberpunk. Traditional body modifications and mutilations (earrings, tattoos; genital mutilation) raise different but related issues. | |||
==Body Processes== | ==Body Processes== | ||
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[[Category:Body themes| Body]] | |||
[[Category:Body | |||
Latest revision as of 19:46, 16 February 2007
Feminist SF has often focused on the body, grounding stories in bodily reality; or tackling the association of women with nature, the earth, and bodies; or taking on sexist perceptions of women's bodies.
Particular topics include:
- Body image and beauty standards
- Fat - Fat women as characters, particularly point-of-view or sympathetic characters, is all too rare; questions of dieting, eating, and weight are related
- Body modification - Since Donna Haraway dropped a bomb on the critical/theoretical community with "The Cyborg Manifesto", body modification to accommodate technology has been a staple consideration of theory as well as of cyberpunk. Traditional body modifications and mutilations (earrings, tattoos; genital mutilation) raise different but related issues.