Scholarly attention to the concept of the posthuman has increased recently in response to pressing problems about what it means to be human and what distinguishes the human from the nonhuman. The ongoing ecological catastrophes, recent technological breakthroughs, and the desire to address in new ways issues involving race, gender, and environment has further intensified this engagement. In the light of this, we hope that this book will serve as a forum for discussing how the concept of the posthuman may have altered our interactions with the natural world, and with one another, for delving into how we may have always been entwined with the nonhuman others, and finally, for speculating, how the posthuman may have repercussions beyond the academy.
Contents: Swagata Singha Ray: Investigating the Post-Anthropocene Futures: Biocapitalism and Posthuman Ontologies in Jeff VanderMeer’s Borne – Niladri Mahapatra: Mandrake, the First Performer of Posthuman Plants: Exploring the Plant-Human Liminality as Posthuman Condition – Tiyasa Dey: Voices of the Non-humans: A Hauntological Inspection of Posthuman Agencies in Select Hindi Films of the Twenty-First Century – Reeswav Chatterjee: Spectres of the Future: The Marginal Children of Posthumanity in Select Stories by Saikat Mukhopadhyay – Saikat Chakraborty: Materiality and Otherness: Interrogating the Post-human in Satyajit Ray and Shirshendu Mukhopadhyay – Shalini Chakraborty: Love in the Time of Posthumanity: Analyzing the Equation between the Bodied and Disembodied Consciousness in Spike Jonze’s Her – Sourav Saha: Transcending the Human/ Post-Human Boundary: Exploring the Ambivalence Concerning the Post-Human in Netflix’s Black Mirror – Jyoti Biswas: Preservation of Orality through Digital Archiving: A Critical Study of Oloi Song in Post-humanist Discourse – Debojyoti Dan: Eliot’s Hollow Men and Radcliffe’s AIDA: Transcending the Binary Programmed Algorithm of Digital and Human – Aishwarya Das Gupta: Death, Decay, and Regeneration: A Post-humanist Reading of “Good Hunting” from the Netflix Series Love, Death & Robots (Volume 1) – Swapna Roy: More than (Biogenetic) Food: Re-questioning the Inevitability of GMOs in Paolo Bacigalupi’s The Calorie Man and The Windup Girl – Aritra Basu: Heterogeneous Platter, Hybrid Presentations: Analyzing the Elements of Posthumanism in Select Works of Sukumar Ray – Joydeep Chakraborty: Creative Posthumanism in the 21st-Century American Poetry: An Examination of Don’t Let Me Be Lonely: An American Lyric and This Connection of Everyone with Lungs – Sujato Ghosh: Confronting Human-Centric Stability, Revisiting the Ineluctable Torture Chamber and Comprehending the Post-Human Uncertainty of Coordinates in J. M. Coetzee’s Waiting for the Barbarians.
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