Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10662/22580
Títulos: A material reading of Brenda Peterson's "Animal Heart"
Autores/as: Villanueva Romero, Diana
Palabras clave: Xenotransplantación;Ciencia;Espiritualidad ecofeminista;Panpsiquismo;Epistemología animista-relacional;Ecocrítica material;Xenotransplantation;Science;Ecofeminist spirituality;Panpsychism;Animist-relational epistemology;Material ecocriticism
Fecha de publicación: 2014
Editor/a: Knowledge Hub Publishing Company Limited
Resumen: This article analyzes the topic of xenotransplantation in American author Brenda Peterson’s novel Animal Heart (2004). The transplanting of a baboon heart into a human patient is analyzed as a case of boundary crossing where the dualisms human/animal and spirit/matter are dismantled. Such a process challenges modern techno-science’s use of human and nonhuman bodies, proposing instead a worldview where matter and its associated terms — animal and body — are reanimated by the practice of panpsychic and animist-relational epistemologies. In light of such a reanimation of matter, this article uses the framework of material ecocriticism to focus on the baboon heart’s nonhuman agentic capacities, which the novelist describes in a way that illustrates the liberating power of literature.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10662/22580
ISSN: 1949-8519
Colección:DFING - Artículos

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