Timing Problems: When Care and Violence Converge in Stephen King's Horror Novel Christine

Hypatia ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 397-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stacy Clifford Simplican

Judith Butler, Joan Tronto, and Stephen King all hinge human experience on shared ontological vulnerability, but whereas Butler and Tronto use vulnerability to build ethical commitments, King exploits aging, disability, and death to frighten us. King's horror genre is provocative for the imaginative landscape of feminist theory precisely because he uses vulnerability to magnify the anxieties of mass culture. In Christine, the characters' shared susceptibility to psychic and physical injury blurs the boundary between care and violence. Like Butler, King depicts our social worlds encrusted with normative violence: the mundane ways that norms police gender, race, class, and disability identities. And like Butler, King makes undecidability a key feature of human identity: the idea that needs and identities are uncertain. Normative violence and undecidability trouble the starting point of Tronto's care theory—attentiveness to needs—because both concepts invest interdependency with ambiguity and conflict. But like Tronto, King recognizes that care‐actors must act, even amid ambiguity and even when their actions make care and aggression converge. Christine's supernatural plot details the psychic possession of an American teenager, but the novel's more terrifying story is about interdependency and how normative violence is not the antithesis of care, but its dark underbelly.

2015 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 687-705 ◽  
Author(s):  
RACHAEL DOBSON

AbstractThis article argues that constructions of social phenomena in social policy and welfare scholarship think about the subjects and objects of welfare practice in essentialising ways, with negativistic effects for practitioners working in ‘regulatory’ contexts such as housing and homelessness practice. It builds into debates about power, agency, social policy and welfare by bringing psychosocial and feminist theorisations of relationality to practice research. It claims that relational approaches provide a starting point for the analysis of empirical practice data, by working through the relationship between the individual and the social via an ontological unpicking and revisioning of practitioners' social worlds.


2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-126
Author(s):  
Joshua M. Hall ◽  

Compulsive smartphone users’ psyches, today, are increasingly directed away from their bodies and onto their devices. This phenomenon has now entered our global vocabulary as “smartphone zombies,” or what I will call “iZombies.” Given the importance of mind to virtually all conceptions of human identity, these compulsive users could thus be productively understood as a kind of human-machine hybrid entity, the cyborg. Assuming for the sake of argument that this hybridization is at worst axiologically neutral, I will construct a kind of phenomenological psychological profile of the type of cyborg which engages in these patterns of behavior. I follow Judith Butler in seeing this identity as the result of performance practices, which as such can be modified or replaced using other performances. Pursing one such alternative, I compose a dancing critique that “reverse engineers” the choreographies implied by these cyborgs’ survival practices. The upshot of this critique is that their movement patterns do indeed align closely to those of horror cinema’s zombies. I therefore conclude by suggesting a few possible choreographic imperatives to facilitate more enabling ways of being for iZombie cyborgs today.


Hypatia ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 17-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Veronica Vasterling

This paper aims to investigate whether and in what respects the conceptions of the body and of agency that Judith Butler develops in Bodies That Matter are useful contributions to feminist theory. The discussion focuses on the clarification and critical assessment of the arguments Butler presents to refute the charges of linguistic monism and determinism.


Sociologija ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 60 (1) ◽  
pp. 112-126
Author(s):  
Luka Mijatovic ◽  
Mirko Filipovic

From the postmodern theorists point of view, disabled bodies primarily are objects of performing the power, in several ways: from ?staring? as the act of labeling, to medicalization, rehabilitation and ?normalization?. Feminist theory of disability tends to combine gender and disability and to perceive them together as social construction products which ?deviate from standards?. In postmodern theories of gender, primarily in the works of Judith Butler and Elizabeth Grosz, there is a noticeable tendency to attach a dynamic, relational characteristic to gender, and to observe gender differences in the process of intersecting all other binary differences. In addition, in order to deconstruct sex/gender differences, an increasing emphasis is put on the body as a field for inscribing culturally constructed distinctions. This paper explores the possibility of synthesizing knowledge in the field of postmodern gender theories and postmodern understanding of disability. It examines how gender binarism intersects with binarism ?disability - nondisability,? and whether, at the level of ?disabled? bodies, gender differences become invisible.


polemica ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 111-130
Author(s):  
Diego Silva Santos ◽  
Sara Wagner Pimenta Gonçalves Jr ◽  
Sergio Baptista Silva ◽  
Anna Marina Pinheiro

Resumo: O presente artigo tem o objetivo de analisar o conceito de Abjeção, à luz de Julia Kristeva e a partir da discussão de Berenice Bento, para compreender de que forma a figura de travestis e transexuais é representada no imaginário da sociedade. Os crimes de ódio, a repulsa social e o nojo são tomados como ponto de partida para discutir abjeção social e seus sentidos. Convergindo com os pontos de reflexão de Judith Butler, Monique Wittig e Gayle Rubin, é trazida a visão da psicanálise via Lacan das fórmulas de sexuação. Conclui-se que a violência contra a população trans e travesti emerge de uma angústia pré-simbólica frente a fissura na certeza do sexo/gênero que as figuras tidas como abjetas estampam. Contudo, é importante ressaltar o apagamento dos corpos travestis e transexuais, que mesmo quando evidenciados na emergência de discursos na atualidade, são apagados na representação pela cisgeneridade.Palavras-chave: (Trans)Feminismos. Travesti. Transgeneridades. Diferença e Abjeção.Abstract: This article analyzes the concept of abjection, in the vision of Julia Kristeva and from the discussion of Berenice Bento, to understand how the figure of transvestites and transsexuals is represented in the imaginary of society. The crimes of hatred, social repulsion and disgust are taken as a starting point to discuss social abjection and its senses. Converging with the points of reflection of Judith Butler, Monique Wittig and Gayle Rubin, the vision of the psychoanalysis by Lacan and the graphs of sexuation has been brought to. It is concluded that the violence against the trans and transvestite population has born of pre-symbolic anguish against the fissure in the certainty of the sex/gender that the figures considered as abject stammer. However, it is important to highlight the erasure of transvestite and transsexual bodies, which even when evidenced in the emergence of discourses today are erased in the representation by cisgenerity.Keywords: (Trans)Feminism. Travesti. Transgender. Diference e Abjection.


Horror genre is defined as speculative fiction which is intended to frighten, scare, disgust, or startle its readers by including feelings of horror and terror. Stephen King is considered as one of the foremost writers of Horror fiction. H.P. Lovecraft is an American writer wrote many horror stories. He invented an pseudo-mythology known as the Cthulhu Mythos which focuses on a pantheon of Monstrous deities which inhabits worlds which are not our own. After Lovecraft, many writers tried to imitate his style. But only few got success. One such writer is Stephen King. He closely followed the style of Lovecraft and produced some of the best fictions in the genre of Horror.


Author(s):  
Clare Chambers

This chapter discusses Judith Butler’s Gender Trouble (GT) and its legacy in political theory. It sets out five themes of GT: the claim that identity is always the result of power; the interplay between sex, gender, and desire; the critique of “identity politics,” including any feminism that posits a stable category of “women”; the concept of performativity; and the possibility of change via subversive performance. The chapter then goes on to discuss the major impact that GT has had on feminist theory, queer theory, trans theory, and intersectionality, along with the surprising lack of impact on theories of multiculturalism and identity theory more broadly. Finally the chapter discusses some main criticisms of the book.


2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 146-151
Author(s):  
O.V. Egorova ◽  
◽  
V.V. Vasyuk ◽  

Emotions, representing a special reality, are a reflection of the ethno-cultural specifics of the world model. The emotion of fear is one of the basic and inherent in every culture. The ability of language elements to enter into relations with each other allows us to talk about the vocabulary of a language as a system. The presence of these relations determines the existence of various groupings within the language system. One of the ways to combine them is a thematic group. The relevance of this study is determined by the analyzed material, which represents the emotion of fear, not only as a thematic group, but also as a multidimensional manifestation of human emotions. This study allows us to trace how the thematic group "Fear" is represented in the English language at the present stage of its development. The purpose of this work is to identify the means of linguistic representation of the manifestation of the emotion of fear in modern English on the material of the works "Pet Cemetery" and "It" by the American writer Stephen King. In the course of the study, the following methods were used: the method of contextual analysis and the method of quantitative analysis. The study of the vocabulary that represents emotions in the text of a work of art allows us to interpret the world of emotions of characters, as well as to reveal the main theme of the work of art. Therefore, in the context of the literature of the horror genre, it is advisable to talk about the use of various means of representing the thematic group "Fear", since the main task of the author is to create an atmosphere of fear and horror in the work.


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