Post-apocalyptic Specters and Critical Planetarity in Merlinda Bobis' Locust Girl

被引:4
作者
Zong, Emily Yu [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Queensland, English, Brisbane, Qld, Australia
[2] Xiamen Univ, Xiamen, Peoples R China
关键词
planetarity; climate change; post-apocalypse; postcolonial; Merlinda Bobis;
D O I
10.1353/ari.2020.0029
中图分类号
I [文学];
学科分类号
05 ;
摘要
Climate change and global ecological crisis demand the reimagining of humanity on a planetary scale, yet planetary ideals risk downplaying human difference and inequality. This article examines Filipina Australian writer Merlinda Bobis' novel Locust Girl (2015) in terms of the development of a critical planetarity that prioritizes an ethics of alterity. The novel links the post-apocalypse with spectrality and alternative futures to suggest that, for one, the planet is already a fragmented concept haunted by uneven geographies of empire and capital, and, for another, the imagination of alternative political life needs to recuperate unrealized historical possibilities of the local. Specifically, the novel draws on the trope of nonhuman metamorphosis to depict its female protagonist, whose nomadic subjectivity unsettles anthropocentric worldviews. Bobis' novel makes a case for placing the ethnic minority writer's response to the Anthropocene at the center of a situated practice of planetarity.
引用
收藏
页码:99 / 123
页数:25
相关论文
共 42 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 2006, Specters of Marx
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2008, GHOSTLY MATTERS
[3]  
[Anonymous], 1000 PLATEAUS
[4]  
[Anonymous], 2017, ENV SCI, DOI DOI 10.1016/J.JES.2016.06.035
[5]  
Bahng Aimee, 2018, MIGRANT FUTURES DECO
[6]  
Blanchot Maurice., 1989, SPACE LIT
[7]  
Bobis Merlinda, 2015, LOCUST GIRL
[8]  
Bobis Merlinda, 1999, WHITE TURTLE
[9]  
Bobis Merlinda, 2012, FISH HAIR WOMAN
[10]  
Bobis Merlinda, 2015, MASCARA LIT REV 1001