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Food in Margaret Atwood’s Speculative Fiction / / by Katarina Labudova



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Autore: Labudova Katarìna Visualizza persona
Titolo: Food in Margaret Atwood’s Speculative Fiction / / by Katarina Labudova Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Cham : , : Springer Nature Switzerland : , : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2022
Edizione: 1st ed. 2022.
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (151 pages)
Disciplina: 809.3
813.54
Soggetto topico: Fiction
America - Literatures
Literature - Aesthetics
Culture - Study and teaching
Fiction Literature
North American Literature
Literary Aesthetics
Cultural Studies
Soggetto non controllato: English Literature
Nota di contenuto: 1 Fasting and Feasting: Food in Speculative Fiction Novels by Margaret Atwood -- 2 Women as White Meat: Chicken, Eggs and “Torsos Only” in The Handmaid’s Tale and The Testaments -- 3 Canned Food: Canned Death in Oryx and Crake -- 4 Corporate Cannibalism: The Year of the Flood -- 5 Eating and Story-telling: Maddaddam -- 6 Junk Food and Prison Food: The Heart Goes Last -- 7 Hybrid Genres: Festive Intertextuality and Hungry Reality.
Sommario/riassunto: This book looks at Margaret Atwood’s use of food motifs in speculative fiction. Focusing on six novels – The Handmaid’s Tale and The Testaments, the Maddaddam trilogy, and The Heart Goes Last – Katarina Labudova explores the environmental, ecological, and cultural questions at play and the possible future scenarios which emerge for humanity’s survival in apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic conditions. Labudova argues that food has special relevance in these novels and that characters’ hunger, limited food choices, culinary creativity and eating rituals are central to Atwood’s depictions of hostile environments. She also links food to hierarchy, dominance and oppression in Atwood’s novels, and foregrounds the problem of hunger, both psychological or physical, caused by pollution and loss of contact with the natural and authentic. The book shows how Atwood’s writing draws from a range of genres, including apocalyptic fiction, science fiction, speculative fiction, dystopia, utopia, fairy tale, myth, and thriller – and how food is an important, highly versatile motif linking these intertextual threads. Katarina Labudova lectures on British and Canadian literature at the Department of English Language and Literature, Catholic University in Ruzomberok, Slovakia. She co-edited Presences and Absences: Transdisciplinary Essays (2013). She has published numerous articles on Margaret Atwood, Angela Carter, identity, monstrosity and the representations of the body and food in postmodern literatures.
Titolo autorizzato: Food in Margaret Atwood's Speculative Fiction  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 9783031191688
9783031191671
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910629296603321
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