The House of Pain: The Island of Dr. Moreau and Post/Trans/ Humanism Today

Authors

  • Elana Gomel Tel-Aviv UNiversity

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33182/joph.v3i3.2069

Keywords:

Antihumanism, evolutionary ethics, Victorian culture, H. G. Wells, science fiction, pain

Abstract

H. G. Wells’ novel The Island of Dr. Moreau (1896) is a bleak critique of the Victorian notion that evolution can provide ethical or social guidance to humanity. This essay reads the novel in the context of the contemporary debate between posthumanism and transhumanism. By applying theoretical models derived from Braidotti, Agamben, Wolfe and others, the essay argues that Wells’ evolutionary antihumanism provides a corrective to both critical posthumanism’s attempts to articulate a non-anthropocentric ethics, and to transhumanism’s dreams of transcending humanity. The essay considers the chronotope of an island polity in the context of evolutionary antihumanism by comparing Wells’ novel with the contemporary biotech thriller Island 731 (2013) by Jeremy Robinson.

 

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Published

2023-10-31

How to Cite

Gomel, E. “The House of Pain: The Island of Dr. Moreau and Post/Trans/ Humanism Today”. Journal of Posthumanism, vol. 3, no. 3, Oct. 2023, pp. 219–232, doi:10.33182/joph.v3i3.2069.

Issue

Section

Articles [Literature & SF]