Living with others inside the self : decolonising transplantation, selfhood and the body politic in Nalo Hopkinson's Brown Girl in the Ring
McCormack, Donna (2016) Living with others inside the self : decolonising transplantation, selfhood and the body politic in Nalo Hopkinson's Brown Girl in the Ring. Medical Humanities, 42 (4). 252–258. ISSN 1473-4265 (https://doi.org/10.1136/medhum-2016-010917)
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Abstract
This article examines anxieties concerning organtransplantation in Nalo Hopkinson’s prize-winning novel Brown Girl in the Ring (1998). The main focus is how this novel re-imagines subjectivity and selfhood as an embodied metaphor for the recon!guring of broader sociopolitical relations. In other words, this article analyses the relationship between the transplanted body and the body politic, arguing that a post-transplant identity, where there is little separation between donor and recipient, is the foundation for a politics based on responsibility for others. Such a responsibility poses a challenge to the race and class segregation that is integral to the post-apocalyptic world of Hopkinson’s novel. Transplantation is not a utopian vision of an egalitarian society coming together in one body; rather, this biotechnological intervention offers a potentially different mode of thinking what it means to work across race, class and embodied division, while always recalling the violence that might facilitate so-called medical progress.
ORCID iDs
McCormack, Donna ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2852-2180;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 78296 Dates: DateEvent24 November 2016Published3 October 2016Published Online31 August 2016AcceptedSubjects: Language and Literature > English literature Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Humanities > English Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 28 Oct 2021 09:15 Last modified: 19 Dec 2024 08:25 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/78296