CFP Anomalous Embodiment in Young Adult Speculative Fiction

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“I don’t think I am like other people”:
Anomalous Embodiment in Young Adult Speculative Fiction.
Editors Sherryl Vint and Mathieu Donner are seeking submissions for a volume of essays on young
adult literature entitled Anomalous Embodiment in Young Adult Speculative Fiction.
The large commercial as well as critical successes of such works as J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter,
Suzanne Collins’s The Hunger Games, Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials or Stephanie Meyer’s
Twilight series have pushed young adult fiction to the forefront of the literary world. However, and
though most of these texts themselves engage in one way or another with questions related to the body,
and, more precisely, to a body that refuses to conform to social norms as to what a body ‘ought to be’,
few academic studies have really explored the relation that young adult fiction entertains with this
adolescent ‘abnormal’ body.
In her work on corporeal feminism, Volatile Bodies, Elizabeth Grosz suggests that adolescence is not
only the period during which the body itself undergoes massive transformation, shifting from childhood
to adulthood, but that it is also in this period that ‘the subject feels the greatest discord between the body
image and the lived body, between its psychical idealized self-image and its bodily changes’ and that
therefore, the ‘philosophical desire to transcend corporeality and its urges may be dated from this
period’ (Volatile Bodies 75). Following upon Grosz’s observation, this interdisciplinary collection of
essays addresses the relation that young adult fiction weaves between the adolescent body and the
‘norm’, this socially constructed idealized body image which the subject perceives to be in direct
conflict with her/his own experience.
This collection will thus be centred on the representation, both positive and negative, of such body or
bodies. From the vampiric and lycanthropic bodies of Twilight and Teen Wolf to the ‘harvested’ bodies
of Neal Shusterman’s novel Unwind, YA fiction entertains a complex relation to the adolescent body.
Often singularized as ‘abnormal’, this body comes to symbolise the violence of a hegemonic and
normative medical discourse which constitutes itself around an ideal of ‘normality’. However, and more
than a simple condemnation or interrogation of the problematic dominant representation of the corporeal
within young adult fiction, this collection also proposes to explore how such texts can present a foray
into new alternative territories. As such, the collection proposes a focus on what Gilles Deleuze and
Félix Guattari’s label the anomalous body, or embodiment re-articulated not necessarily as the
presumption of an inside and an outside of normality, but rather as ‘a position or set of positions in
relation to a multiplicity’ (A Thousand Plateaus, 244), one which interrogates and challenges the setting
of such a boundary by positioning itself at the threshold of normativity.
We are particularly looking for contributions on works which either (1) interrogate, problematize the
dominant discourse on normative embodiment present in YA fiction, (2) emphasize, by a play on
repetition or any other means, the limitations of the traditional discourse on the ‘abnormal’ or ‘disabled’
body, and signal the inherent violence of such normative paradigms, and/or (3) propose an alternative
approach to the anomalous body. Relevant topics include (but are not limited to):
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(Re-)Articulating disability;
The adolescent as ‘abnormally’ embodied;
Transcending gender and the sexuated body;
Medical norms and the violence of ‘normative’ embodiment;
Bodies and prosthetic technologies, or the posthuman boundary;
Genetics, Diseases and medication, or transforming the body from the inside;
Cognitive readings of the body, or how do we read body difference;
Embodied subjectivities, anomalous/abnormal consciousness;
We invite proposals (approximately 500 words) for 8’000-10’000-word chapters by Monday 15th
September. Abstract submissions should be included in a Word document and sent to Sherryl Vint
(sherryl.vint@ucr.edu) and Mathieu Donner (Mathieu.Donner@nottingham.ac.uk). Please remember to
include name, affiliation, academic title and email address. Postgraduate and early-careers researchers
are encouraged to participate.
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