En savoir plus
This collection argues that Connie Willis's oeuvre performs science fiction's task of cognitive estrangement by highlighting by highlighting our human inability to read the times correctly-and yet also affirming the ethical imperative to attempt to truly observe and record our temporal location
Table des matières
Introduction
PART I: ContagionChapter One: All This Has Happened Before, and All This Will Happen Again:
Doomsday Book and Recurring Pandemics
Joelle L. Renstrom
Chapter Two: Flip Passes: Interpreting Agency and Contagion in
BellwetherJill Marie Treftz
PART II: Individual and Collective TraumaChapter Three: Emergency Unpreparedness: Responses to Disaster in Connie Willis's
Passage Matthew Newcomb
Chapter Four: Taking it Personally: Private Engagement with Public Trauma from World War II to J.F.K.
Janet L. Bland
PART III: Incarnation and EmbodimentChapter Five: "You Were Here All Along":
Doomsday Book and the Bodies of Christ
Chad Schrock
Chapter Six: Christmas Every Day: Incarnational Theology in Connie Willis's "Inn" and "Epiphany"
Erin Newcomb
PART IV: IntertextualityChapter Seven: Bell Speech in John Donne, Richard Wilbur, and Connie Willis's
Doomsday Book William Tate
Chapter Eight: Finding Love (and Truth?) in the Midst of Chaos: The Influence of Dorothy L. Sayers's Detective Fiction on
To Say Nothing of the DogChristine A. Colón
PART V: Genre, Gender, and XenophobiaChapter Nine: The Mote in the Jester's Eye: Aspects of Race and Gender in Connie Willis's Light Short Fiction
Sylvia Kelso
Chapter Ten: "Tell All the Truth but Tell it Slant": Rhetorical Humor in Connie Willis's Short Fiction
Rosalyn Eves
PART VI: Humanist and Posthumanist WitnessChapter Eleven: Messages in a Bottle: The Historian's Ethic in Connie Willis's Quantum Universe
Kathryn N. McDaniel
Chapter Twelve: Schrödinger's Cathedrals: Humanist Memory and Posthumanist Sacramentality in Connie Willis's Fiction
Carissa Turner Smith
A propos de l'auteur
Carissa Turner Smith is Professor of English and Writing Center Director at Charleston Southern University, where she teaches American literature. Her book
Cyborg Saints: Religion and Posthumanism in Middle Grade and Young Adult Fiction was published by Routledge in 2020.
Résumé
This collection argues that Connie Willis’s oeuvre performs science fiction’s task of cognitive estrangement by highlighting by highlighting our human inability to read the times correctly—and yet also affirming the ethical imperative to attempt to truly observe and record our temporal location