Description

Book Synopsis

Orphan Black: Performance, Gender, Biopolitics is an edited collection that covers the areas in which the series has generated the most academic interest: performance and technology; gender and reproduction; biopolitics and community.

Chapters explore the digital innovations and technical interactions between human and machine that allow the show to challenge conventional notions of performance and identity, while others address family themes and Orphan Black’s own textual genealogy within the contexts of (post-)evolutionary science, reproductive technology and the politics of gender. Still others extend that inquiry on family to the broader question of community in a ‘posthuman’ world of biopolitical power; here, scholars mobilize philosophy, history of science and literary theory to analyze how Orphan Black depicts resistance to the many forms of power that attempt to capture, monitor and shape life.



Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Andrea Goulet and Robert A. Rushing

Part One: Performance/Technology/Gender

Gesture in Orphan Black

David F. Bell

Playing with TechnoDollies: The TV Actress and Other Technologies

Christopher Grobe

Animating Cloning: Special Effects and Mediated Bodies in Orphan Black and Jurassic Park

Simon Porzak

Watching While (Face) Blind: Clone Layering and Prosopagnosia

Sharrona Pearl

Part Two: Reproduction/Biopolitics/Community

Game of Clones: Orphan Black’s Family Romance

John C. Stout

Orphan Black and the Ideology of DNA

Hilary Neroni

Being Together: Immunity and Community in Orphan Black

Jessica Tanner

The Dancing Women: Decoding Biopolitical Fantasy

Robert A. Rushing

The Replicant’s ‘Réplique’: Motherhood and the Posthuman Family as Resistance in Orphan Black

Andrea Goulet

Afterword: Reflections on the Show, and Interviews with Cast, Crew and Creators

Lili Loofbourow

Appendix: Orphan Black Episodes 203

References 207

Notes on Contributors 217

Index

Orphan Black: Performance, Gender, Biopolitics

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    A Paperback / softback by Andrea Goulet, Robert A. Rushing

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      View other formats and editions of Orphan Black: Performance, Gender, Biopolitics by Andrea Goulet

      Publisher: Intellect Books
      Publication Date: 15/01/2019
      ISBN13: 9781783209224, 978-1783209224
      ISBN10: 1783209224

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Orphan Black: Performance, Gender, Biopolitics is an edited collection that covers the areas in which the series has generated the most academic interest: performance and technology; gender and reproduction; biopolitics and community.

      Chapters explore the digital innovations and technical interactions between human and machine that allow the show to challenge conventional notions of performance and identity, while others address family themes and Orphan Black’s own textual genealogy within the contexts of (post-)evolutionary science, reproductive technology and the politics of gender. Still others extend that inquiry on family to the broader question of community in a ‘posthuman’ world of biopolitical power; here, scholars mobilize philosophy, history of science and literary theory to analyze how Orphan Black depicts resistance to the many forms of power that attempt to capture, monitor and shape life.



      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements

      Introduction

      Andrea Goulet and Robert A. Rushing

      Part One: Performance/Technology/Gender

      Gesture in Orphan Black

      David F. Bell

      Playing with TechnoDollies: The TV Actress and Other Technologies

      Christopher Grobe

      Animating Cloning: Special Effects and Mediated Bodies in Orphan Black and Jurassic Park

      Simon Porzak

      Watching While (Face) Blind: Clone Layering and Prosopagnosia

      Sharrona Pearl

      Part Two: Reproduction/Biopolitics/Community

      Game of Clones: Orphan Black’s Family Romance

      John C. Stout

      Orphan Black and the Ideology of DNA

      Hilary Neroni

      Being Together: Immunity and Community in Orphan Black

      Jessica Tanner

      The Dancing Women: Decoding Biopolitical Fantasy

      Robert A. Rushing

      The Replicant’s ‘Réplique’: Motherhood and the Posthuman Family as Resistance in Orphan Black

      Andrea Goulet

      Afterword: Reflections on the Show, and Interviews with Cast, Crew and Creators

      Lili Loofbourow

      Appendix: Orphan Black Episodes 203

      References 207

      Notes on Contributors 217

      Index

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