While Battlestar Galactica reinvigorated the science fiction genre by representing contemporary political problems in a complex, often radical fashion, the series also makes visible a new articulation of eugenic thinking. Postmodern eugenics repurposes turn-of-the 20th century ideas of racial progress and recombines them with different narratives and ideologies so that audiences may receive them as new and cut off from history. By centering its finale on the survival of one genetically idealized child, Battlestar constructs a new narrative context for an old story that rationalizes the sacrifice of the non-heterosexual, non-reproductive, and non-conformist to build a "better" race. The idealization of biraciality in Battlestar puts eugenic ...
International audienceThe genetic revolution is marked, in particular, by complex transformations in...
International audienceIn Brave New World (1932), children are created in test tubes and maternity is...
Professor Greg Carter’s next book brings together two phenomena prominent in the past four decades: ...
While Battlestar Galactica reinvigorated the science fiction genre by representing contemporary poli...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 86-95)This thesis explores the ways in which Battlestar Gala...
The science fiction television series Battlestar Galactica explores the differences between human an...
Having established the importance of diverse family formations in the saga, I will delve deeper to t...
Battlestar Galactica, a television series that aired on the SyFy Channel from 2003 to 2009, tells th...
Battlestar Galactica represents a deliberately fantasized world but this, of course, does not mean t...
International audienceThis paper deals with the way the science fiction series Battlestar Galactica ...
Looking at a television franchise like Battlestar Galactica (BSG) is no longer news within the disci...
The re-imagined television series Battlestar Galactica features few natural environments and Earth i...
© 2014 Dr. Andrew SchapperAfrican-American writer Octavia E. Butler brought the ethics of eugenics t...
Genetic Automata by artists Larry Achiampong and David Blandy, curated by Nicola Triscott and commis...
Concepts of death and immortality are integral themes within the television series Battlestar Galact...
International audienceThe genetic revolution is marked, in particular, by complex transformations in...
International audienceIn Brave New World (1932), children are created in test tubes and maternity is...
Professor Greg Carter’s next book brings together two phenomena prominent in the past four decades: ...
While Battlestar Galactica reinvigorated the science fiction genre by representing contemporary poli...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 86-95)This thesis explores the ways in which Battlestar Gala...
The science fiction television series Battlestar Galactica explores the differences between human an...
Having established the importance of diverse family formations in the saga, I will delve deeper to t...
Battlestar Galactica, a television series that aired on the SyFy Channel from 2003 to 2009, tells th...
Battlestar Galactica represents a deliberately fantasized world but this, of course, does not mean t...
International audienceThis paper deals with the way the science fiction series Battlestar Galactica ...
Looking at a television franchise like Battlestar Galactica (BSG) is no longer news within the disci...
The re-imagined television series Battlestar Galactica features few natural environments and Earth i...
© 2014 Dr. Andrew SchapperAfrican-American writer Octavia E. Butler brought the ethics of eugenics t...
Genetic Automata by artists Larry Achiampong and David Blandy, curated by Nicola Triscott and commis...
Concepts of death and immortality are integral themes within the television series Battlestar Galact...
International audienceThe genetic revolution is marked, in particular, by complex transformations in...
International audienceIn Brave New World (1932), children are created in test tubes and maternity is...
Professor Greg Carter’s next book brings together two phenomena prominent in the past four decades: ...