Brave New Objects: Subverting Subjectivity in Margaret Atwood’s Hagseed, The Tempest Retold
Résumé
This paper concerns itself with the multiplication of objects in Hagseed – The Tempest retold, Objects journey from Shakespeare's play into the 2016 novel and act both as attributes, and as co-extensions of bodies, forming original entities when modifying the corporeality of characters. As the original Shakespeare play materializes as an object (the book the reader is holding but also the video performance in the diegesis), a reflexion on the control of bodies, and their (dis)location is carried out. A multiplicity of repetitions, substitutions, imitations, keep opening new doors in the novel but go beyond postmodern allusions to a world where originality has collapsed. Such repetitions are analyzed in this paper through the lens of Walter Benjamin’s work on the reproductivity of modern art, of Linda Hutcheon’s analysis of postmodern literature, and of Foucault's analysis of epistemic shifts at the end of the Renaissance. We consider whether objects and/or things function as evolutionary mechanisms through their metamorphosis and extend this by examining whether the result of this adaptability resonates with the resilience of literature as a whole. In contrast to the idea that reality is unfathomable, certain objects provide us with a new vision of strangeness, of otherness and possibly monstrosity, thereby offering us alternate realities.
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