Towards a Daoist Futurity

IF 0.2 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE EXTRAPOLATION Pub Date : 2023-12-19 DOI:10.3828/extr.2023.18
Mia Chen Ma
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Abstract

Chinese science fiction writer Han Song’s novel Red Ocean (2004) presents a future world in which humans utilize technology to transform into aquatic incarnations of themselves, in order to adapt to the collapsing ecosystems around them. This paper argues that Han’s novel constructs a transcultural “aquatic posthumanism” that is situated at the intersection of what Zygmunt Bauman terms “liquid modernity” (3) and the Daoist notion of “liquid vitality” (Miller 44). While the emergence of “liquid modernity” delivers a promise that a technological boom leads to a world that promotes open communication and swift action, a world without borders, it actually reinforces further invisible barriers between people, as well as between the human and the more-than-human world. Han’s conceptualization of aquatic posthumanism challenges a version of techno-determinist transhumanism, elevating the ecological theme of Red Ocean to the level of Daoist ecology in an effort to provoke an agile and adaptable form of resistance to anthropocentrism.
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走向道教的未来
中国科幻小说家韩松的小说《红海》(2004 年)展现了一个未来世界,在这个世界里,人类利用技术将自己变成水生化身,以适应周围正在崩溃的生态系统。本文认为,韩松的小说构建了一种跨文化的 "水生后人类主义",它处于齐格蒙特-鲍曼(Zygmunt Bauman)所称的 "液态现代性"(3)和道教 "液态生命力"(Miller 44)概念的交汇点。虽然 "液态现代性 "的出现带来了一个承诺,即技术的繁荣将带来一个促进开放交流和迅速行动的世界,一个没有国界的世界,但它实际上进一步加强了人与人之间以及人类与超人类世界之间的无形壁垒。韩的水生后人道主义概念挑战了技术决定论版本的超人类主义,将《红海》的生态主题提升到了道教生态学的高度,试图激起对人类中心主义的一种敏捷而适应性强的反抗。
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来源期刊
EXTRAPOLATION
EXTRAPOLATION LITERATURE-
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
33.30%
发文量
8
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