This article explores the relationship between God and a posthuman representative of humanity in Octavia Butler’s “The Book of Martha” (2005). Using Daphne Hampson’s feminist post-Biblical ideas, the article argues that the story, as a sample of science fiction, exposes a posthumanist perspective where existence and subjectivity of human kind is defined based on a mutual, non-hierarchical relationship between human being and God. The article aims to explore the capacity of the story to embody a positive standpoint of science fiction towards the transformation of the human. This article suggests that “The Book of Martha,” reflecting this transformation together with an unothered perspective of the Godhuman relationship, illustrates t...
Octavia Butler\u27s Parable of the Sower is set in a world where patriarchal supremacy has stifled n...
This is the author's pre-print of a chapter proposed for publication in Palgrave handbook of posthum...
This is a book review of Victoria Flanagan\u27s book Technology and Identity in Young Adult Fiction:...
This article explores the relationship between God and a posthuman representative of humanity in Oct...
It is my intention in this paper to define Butler’s Change God and illustrate how she created it to ...
Science fiction enables us to explore alternative notions of gender, identity, and biotechnological ...
Octavia E. Butler’s Parable of the Sower and Parable of the Talents provide readers with often radic...
Octavia Butler is one of the only writers of science fiction who identifies as a black lesbian. This...
Octavia Butler authored many science fiction novels and short stories, almost all of which have been...
This thesis explores the extent to which Octavia Butler’s use of the Other, in her trilogy Lilith’s ...
Octavia E. Butler’s Parable of the Sower and Parable of the Talents provide readers with often radic...
The relationship of philosophy and the human-animal divide is a long one. One could begin with the a...
7 pagesTo view the transcript of Moya Bailey and Adrienne Maree Brown's conversation, see the attach...
For almost all of human history both in ancient times and in modern contexts, talk about God has bee...
Donna Haraway has referred to Octavia Butler as a theorist for cyborgs and while much work has bee...
Octavia Butler\u27s Parable of the Sower is set in a world where patriarchal supremacy has stifled n...
This is the author's pre-print of a chapter proposed for publication in Palgrave handbook of posthum...
This is a book review of Victoria Flanagan\u27s book Technology and Identity in Young Adult Fiction:...
This article explores the relationship between God and a posthuman representative of humanity in Oct...
It is my intention in this paper to define Butler’s Change God and illustrate how she created it to ...
Science fiction enables us to explore alternative notions of gender, identity, and biotechnological ...
Octavia E. Butler’s Parable of the Sower and Parable of the Talents provide readers with often radic...
Octavia Butler is one of the only writers of science fiction who identifies as a black lesbian. This...
Octavia Butler authored many science fiction novels and short stories, almost all of which have been...
This thesis explores the extent to which Octavia Butler’s use of the Other, in her trilogy Lilith’s ...
Octavia E. Butler’s Parable of the Sower and Parable of the Talents provide readers with often radic...
The relationship of philosophy and the human-animal divide is a long one. One could begin with the a...
7 pagesTo view the transcript of Moya Bailey and Adrienne Maree Brown's conversation, see the attach...
For almost all of human history both in ancient times and in modern contexts, talk about God has bee...
Donna Haraway has referred to Octavia Butler as a theorist for cyborgs and while much work has bee...
Octavia Butler\u27s Parable of the Sower is set in a world where patriarchal supremacy has stifled n...
This is the author's pre-print of a chapter proposed for publication in Palgrave handbook of posthum...
This is a book review of Victoria Flanagan\u27s book Technology and Identity in Young Adult Fiction:...