Repository logo
 

The Sum of Our Parts: Race, Blood, and Genetics in Three Dystopian Young Adult Novels

Files

Please login to access this content.

WISE-MASTERSTHESIS-2016.pdf (750.65 KB)

This item will be available on:

Authors

Wise, Sarah A

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

East Carolina University

Abstract

In the last decade, the young adult genre subset of speculative fiction has experienced growth in both publication and popularity. As the breadth of the genre has increased, more multicultural authors and characters have come to light in these types of books, utilizing the genre to focus on social and political issues related to diversity. This paper will focus on three such novels: Shadows Cast by Stars by Katherine Knutsson, Orleans by Sherri L. Smith, and House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer. These three texts focus on different ethnic groups within North America and issues of discrimination through racialization within those communities. All three texts imagine a dystopian future in which identity is biologically coded into human bodies, and that identity determines the usefulness and fate of those bodies. I argue that, through the dystopias each novel creates, the texts provide a critique of the dehumanization of peoples through race and its association with blood and genetics. The characters in each text confront this dehumanization by refuting the social identity ascribed to them and reclaiming their own individual identity through experience and communal interaction.

Description

Citation

item.page.doi