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A New Race of Immortals”: A Posthumanist Reading of “Poe Posthumous; or, the Light-House

  • Xinshuo Zhou
  • , Quan Wang*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This article proposes a posthumanist reading of Joyce Carol Oates’s “Poe Posthumous; or, The Light-House,” and argues that posthumanism provides human beings with a new way of living. In the story, the narrator comes to the Light-House at Viña de Mar to participate in a scientific experiment. As an “exemplary specimen of Homo sapiens,” the narrator endeavours to preserve human knowledge, which symbolises his superiority over nonhuman species. However, on becoming further involved in nature, he gradually abandons his anthropocentric thought, and learns to live with other species. The posthumanist thought finds its full expression in the symbiotic coexistence of multiple species and culminates in the narrator’s cross-species marriage to a female Cyclophagus. The juxtaposition of the decentring of anthropocentrism with the ascent of nonhuman agents highlights the posthumanist coexistence of humans and nonhumans.

Original languageEnglish
Article number11259
JournalJournal of Literary Studies
Volume38
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 2022

Keywords

  • Light-House
  • coexistence
  • knowledge
  • nonhuman
  • posthumanism

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