Przeglądanie według Temat "Margaret Atwood"
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Pozycja Garden Politics in Margaret Atwood’s Selected Speculative Fiction Novels(Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Rzeszowskiego, 2018) Wieczorek, PaulaFollowing Shelley Saguaro’s belief that the incorporation of a garden in a text is reflective of ideological aesthetic premises, this paper intends to study the representation of gardens in two speculative fiction novels by the prominent Canadian writer, Margaret Atwood: “The Handmaid’s Tale’ (1985) and “The Year of the Flood” (2009). In her books Atwood presents the readers with an apocalyptic vision of an environmental crisis resulting from profit maximisation in capitalist societies. The patriarchal domination over nature in the novels is intrinsically connected to the domination over women. The female protagonists’ bodies are represented in terms of marketable value, as every part of their body can be described as a resource for extraction. Referring to ecofeminist critics including Carolyn Merchant and Karen J. Warren, as well as the works of ecocritical scholars such as Lawrence Buell, the paper examines the way Atwood’s literary gardens reflect on the complex issues of environmentalism, religion, technology and gender politics. Special attention is paid to flower imagery as well as to the animals living in Atwood’s literary gardens and their connection to the female protagonists. Since the paper discusses novels that were published over 20 years apart, it reveals the way Atwood’s perspective on the above-mentioned issues has evolved over time.Pozycja “Jimmy didn’t envy him. (He envied him.)”: Social and personal consequences of liberal eugenics in Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam trilogy(Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Rzeszowskiego, 2024-12) Kozioł, SławomirThe article interprets Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam trilogy as an important, critical voice in the debate over the desirability of liberal eugenics – genetic programming of children that is regulated only by the market forces of supply and demand. Arguing that the trilogy indicates potential effects of liberal eugenics on both the functioning of society and an individual’s sense of self, the article refers to a number of theoretical texts coming from the fields of bioethics, social psychology and anthropology, but its primary source of argumentation lies in the philosophy of Jürgen Habermas.