Octavia E. Butler is widely recognized today as one of the most important figures in contemporary science fiction. Bringing together leading and emerging scholars and covering Butler's complete works from the bestselling novel Kindred, to her short stories and major novel sequences Patternmaster, Xenogenesis and The Parables, this is the most comprehensive Companion to Butler scholarship available today.
The Bloomsbury Handbook to Octavia E. Butler covers the full range of contemporary scholarly themes and approaches to the author's work, including:
· Cyborgs and the posthuman
· Race and African American history
· Afrofuturism
· Gender and sexuality
· New perspectives from Religious Studies, the Environmental Humanities and Disability Studies
· New discoveries from the Butler archives at the Huntington Library
The book includes a comprehensive bibliography of works by Butler and secondary scholarship on her work as well as an afterword by the novelist Tananarive Due.
Recenzijas
The Bloomsbury Handbook to Octavia E. Butleris compelling overview of the work of this vital writer. Equally attentive to her contributions to speculative fiction, African American studies, and theoretical work concerns with social justice, the essays collected here attest to Butlers complexity and range. Bookended by two personal reflections from Steven Barnes and Tananarive Due, important authors themselves, it further provides a glimpse of the thoughtful person behind the powerful fiction. The Bloomsbury Handbookoffers new insights into Butlers most discussed fiction, such as her Xenogenesis trilogy and Parablesnovels, and brings needed critical attention to the entire body of her work, including the out-of-print novel Survivor and unpublished material now available in archival papers. An indispensable overview of Butlers status as one of the most important novelists of her era, this Handbookbrings together essays from an impressive range of disciplinary frameworksliterature, neuroscience, biopolitics, disability studies, posthumanist theory, fan studies, postcolonial theory, and visual arts. The volume includes reflections on the challenges and promises of teaching Butlers fiction in undergraduate classrooms and ones that engage how Butlers ideas have become foundational for ongoing work in antiracist activism. This fascinating collection makes clear that Butler speaks both to her own time and to ours. In both Butlers fiction and in the scholarship assembled her, hope shines through even as the works clear-sightedly address the darkness of our world. * Sherryl Vint, Director of the Speculative Fictions and Cultures of Science program, University of California, Riverside, USA * This volume marks a significant contribution to the scholarship on Octavia E. Butler. The editors have assembled and expertly curated articles on Butlers work, ranging from personal recollections by fellow writers and themes which occupied Butlers thinking, to her theorizing on colonialism, post humanism, and the meanings of consent under conditions of unequal distribution of power. By situating Butlers appeal and significance to new movements for racial and gender equality, new interpretations of Butlers work are brought to light demonstrating Butlers capacity to shed light on the human condition. This volume forms a rich interpretative and interdisciplinary tapestry which will provoke and inspire future research on one of the most significant writers of the 20th century. * Hoda Zaki, Professor of Political Science, Hood College, USA * The impressively interdisciplinary scope of the collectionwhich includes the work of scholars of science fiction, fan studies, postcolonial theory, and Black studies, among many other fieldsalong with its focus on the work of emerging scholars makes this an exciting contribution to the critical conversation surrounding Butlers writing. * Modern Language Review *
Papildus informācija
Covering the full range of her writing from her short stories to the bestselling novel Kindred, this is the most comprehensive guide available to scholarship on the leading science fiction writer Octavia E. Butler.
FOREWORD
Sandra Y. Govan
INTRODUCTION
Gregory J. Hampton and Kendra R. Parker
PART I: Dawn
What Octavia E. Butler Feared Most About Human Nature
Steven Barnes, Science fiction, fantasy and horror author
I want to live forever and breed people!: The Legacy of a Fantasy
Heather Thaxter, University Centre Doncaster, UK
Interpreting Disability Metaphor and Race in Octavia E. Butlers The Evening
and the Morning and the Night.
Sami Schalk, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
Problematizing Consent in the Posthuman Era: Octavia E. Butlers Bloodchild
and Amnesty
Joe Heidenescher, Howard University, USA
PART II: Adulthood Rites
Im not the vampire he is; I give in return for my taking: Tracing
Vampirism in Octavia E. Butlers Xenogenesis Trilogy
Kendra R. Parker, Georgia Southern University, USA
Becoming-Posthuman: The Sexualized, Racialized, and Naturalized Others of
Octavia E. Butlers Liliths Brood
Kitty Dunkley, independent scholar
Teaching the Other of Colonialism: The Mimic (Wo)Men of Xenogenesis
Aparajita Nanda, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Octavia E. Butlers Discourse on Colonialism and Identity: Dis/eased Identity
in Bloodchild, Dawn, and Survivor
Gregory J. Hampton, Howard University, USA
PART III: Imago
Visualizing Dana and Transhistorical Time Travel on the Covers of Octavia E.
Butler's Kindred
Christine Montgomery, California State University, Sacramento, USA and Ellen
C. Caldwell, Mt. San Antonio College, USA
Apocalypse, Afro-Futures, & Theories of the Living Beyond Human Rights:
Octavia E. Butlers Parable Series
Chriss Sneed, University of Connecticut , USA
Trauma, Technology, and the Trickster: Reading Octavia E. Butlers Unfinished
Trilogy
Ji Hyun Lee, Cornell University, USA
The Pregnant Man Story: Echoes of Octavia E. Butlers Themes of Reproductive
Anxiety in Fan Writing
Heather Osborne, independent scholar
A Space for Discomfort: Octavia E. Butler and the Pedagogy of the Taboo
Aryn Bartley, Lane Community College, USA
Finding the Superhero in Damian Duffys and John Jenningss Graphic Novel
Adaptation
of Octavia Butlers Science-Fiction-Postmodern-Slave-Narrative, Kindred
Forrest Yerman, Howard University, USA
AFTERWORD
Tananarive Due, University of California Los Angeles, USA
Gregory J. Hampton is Professor of African-American Literature at Howard University, USA. He is the author of Changing Bodies in the Fiction of Octavia Butler (2010) and Imagining Slaves and Robots in Literature, Film and Popular Culture (2015). Kendra R. Parker, author of She Bites Back: Black Female Vampires in African American Womens Novels, 1977-2011 (2018), is an Assistant Professor of English in the Department of Literature at Georgia Southern University.