Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Regenesis
1. Genetics as Science, Ideology, and Fiction
2. The Evolution of Genetic Fantasy
3. The Cultural Determinism of Genetic Realism
4. Serpent Women, Prophets, and Satire in Genetic Metafiction
5. The Predisposed Agency of Genetics and Fiction
Coda: Arrival
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Everett Hamner is Associate Professor of English at Western Illinois University. everetthamner.com
“Editing the Soul will be appreciated by scholars of literature and
science, postsecular theory, and science fiction. It will be
particularly useful for teachers and scholars interested in
thinking about the classification of genetic fiction as a subgenre
of science fiction. Hamner’s study will also prove especially
engaging for those looking for in-depth readings of any one of the
multiple texts that he covers.”—Melissa M. Littlefield American
Literary History
“Hamner’s critical modesty gives us a humble account that knows how
to stay local, respect differences, and honor the acuity of its
subjects of study, be they nucleotides or novelists. . . . [A] book
of surpassing subtlety and nuance.”—Rebekah Sheldon Science Fiction
Studies
“Written with clarity and an appealing balance, Editing the Soul
makes an original contribution to an important topic—the way
novels, films, and television about genetics are reshaping our
understanding of human nature.”—Jay Clayton, author of Charles
Dickens in Cyberspace: The Afterlife of the Nineteenth Century in
Postmodern Culture
“Editing the Soul plumbs contemporary literature, film, and comics
dealing with genetic modification. Drawing on postsecularism,
Hamner shows how these works enable us to balance the drive for
technotranscendence with the continuing demand for deep human
meaning. Standout readings of the fiction of Octavia Butler and
Margaret Atwood are some of the many pleasures of this important,
accessible, and highly timely book.”—Susan Merrill Squier, author
of Epigenetic Landscapes: Drawings as Metaphor
“What Editing the Soul shows is that, far from offering simplistic
depictions of utopia or dystopia, genetic science has become a
variable field for the popular cultural imagination.”—Lars Schmeink
Foundation: The International Review of Science Fiction
“Hamner’s careful balance between rigorous pragmatism and creative
flexibility is refreshing. And the book’s straightforward prose can
be understood not as a rejection of critical theory but rather as
praxis in his call for interdisciplinary collaboration.”—Katherine
Thorsteinson Modern Fiction Studies
“These [Human Programming and Editing the Soul] are both exemplary
works of criticism, which should serve as models for what
interdisciplinary literary-cultural criticism can do for a
twenty-first-century academy that needs smart, careful humanities
scholarship on the sciences more than ever.”—Gerry Canavan American
Literature
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