This thesis investigates the representation of posthuman corporeality in twenty-first-century British fiction through the works of Naomi Alderman, Jeanette Winterson, Kazuo Ishiguro, and Maggie Gee. While posthuman studies have frequently privileged speculative science fiction and North American contexts, this study argues that contemporary British literature offers a distinctive contribution by embedding posthuman concerns within recognisably British literary forms, including the condition-of-England novel and the novel of manners. At the same time, these texts reveal how the legacies of colonialism, technological modernity, and ecological crisis continue to shape contemporary understandings of embodiment. Methodologically, the thesis combines close textual analysis with insights from Critical Posthumanism, feminist and queer posthuman theory, ecocriticism, and new materialism. Rather than treating literary texts as illustrations of philosophical concepts, it approaches them as sites of knowledge production capable of generating original reflections on the posthuman condition. Furthermore, the thesis develops the concept of palimpsestic corporeality to describe bodies as layered material formations continuously rewritten by ecotechnological forces. Through analyses of Alderman's electric bodies, Winterson's technocritique of digital substitution, Ishiguro's sympoietic ethics of care, and Gee's ecological imaginaries of deep time, it argues that posthuman embodiment is characterised not by transcendence but by relationality, vulnerability, and continual becoming. In doing so, the study argues that contemporary British fiction reimagines the Posthuman not as the disappearance of the human, but as an invitation to inhabit embodiment differently within an increasingly interconnected world.

Raso, A. (2026). Un-shaping Matter: Posthuman Corporealities in Contemporary British Fiction.

Un-shaping Matter: Posthuman Corporealities in Contemporary British Fiction

Andrea Raso
2026-06-24

Abstract

This thesis investigates the representation of posthuman corporeality in twenty-first-century British fiction through the works of Naomi Alderman, Jeanette Winterson, Kazuo Ishiguro, and Maggie Gee. While posthuman studies have frequently privileged speculative science fiction and North American contexts, this study argues that contemporary British literature offers a distinctive contribution by embedding posthuman concerns within recognisably British literary forms, including the condition-of-England novel and the novel of manners. At the same time, these texts reveal how the legacies of colonialism, technological modernity, and ecological crisis continue to shape contemporary understandings of embodiment. Methodologically, the thesis combines close textual analysis with insights from Critical Posthumanism, feminist and queer posthuman theory, ecocriticism, and new materialism. Rather than treating literary texts as illustrations of philosophical concepts, it approaches them as sites of knowledge production capable of generating original reflections on the posthuman condition. Furthermore, the thesis develops the concept of palimpsestic corporeality to describe bodies as layered material formations continuously rewritten by ecotechnological forces. Through analyses of Alderman's electric bodies, Winterson's technocritique of digital substitution, Ishiguro's sympoietic ethics of care, and Gee's ecological imaginaries of deep time, it argues that posthuman embodiment is characterised not by transcendence but by relationality, vulnerability, and continual becoming. In doing so, the study argues that contemporary British fiction reimagines the Posthuman not as the disappearance of the human, but as an invitation to inhabit embodiment differently within an increasingly interconnected world.
24-giu-2026
38
LINGUE, LETTERATURE E CULTURE STRANIERE
Posthuman, Posthumanism, Existential Posthumanism, Literary Posthumanism, Critical Posthumanism, Transhumanism, Contemporary British Fiction, Corporeality, Palimpsest, New Materialism, Vulnerability Ecocriticism, Climate Fiction, Queer Studies, Feminist Posthumanism, Mixtopia, Technocritique, SF, material realism
Esposito, Lucia
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11590/549976
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