Title of article
Mutiny by Mutation: Uses of Neoteny in Science Fiction
Author/Authors
Susan Honeyman، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
20
From page
347
To page
366
Abstract
Developmentalism and Romanticism represent contrary poles in an absolutist dichotomy that frames most Western discourse on childhood. This opposition is generally recognized in current childhood studies but the former discourse still dominates institutional practices. Both views, however, rely on similar presumptions—that development is a linear process, whether an ascent or descent; that childhood as a subjective position is best understood through simple absolutes; that through studying children we can know them and even learn about our adult selves. These common premises reinforce each discourse’s credibility and obscure their contradictions, justifying adult projections and stereotypes. In this essay I demonstrate the deconstruction of this binary in science fiction (my samples come from texts written for or popular among adolescents) and examine the more empowering views posited therein, exemplified by interpreting evolution as neotenous, or led by children.
Keywords
Development , Evolution , essentialism , Neoteny , Science fiction
Journal title
Childrens Literature in Education
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Childrens Literature in Education
Record number
827907
Link To Document