Title of article :
‘‘I’m Glad I was Designed’’: Un/Doing Gender
and Class in Susan Price’s ‘‘Odin Trilogy’’
Author/Authors :
Sanna Lehtonen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Abstract :
Susan Price’s ‘‘Odin Trilogy’’ (2005–2008) is a juvenile science fiction
series that depicts a future where class relations have become polarised due to late
capitalist and technological developments and where ways of doing gender continue to
be strongly connected with class. The society in the novels is based on slavery: people
are either Freewomen/Freemen or bonders. Here wealth and genetic engineering
regulate normative ways of doing gender and class and define borders between
humanity and inhumanity. By drawing on recent feminist theory and queer theorisations
of Butler (2004) and Halberstam (2005), I will examine gender and class as both
material and performative aspects of identity that are ‘‘un/done’’ in relation to heteronormative
life trajectories. I focus on the two female protagonists and their classic
role reversal: one escapes slavery while the other is forced to become a bonder.
The classic scenario becomes more complicated when the girls escape together to
Mars and start a new life there as a queer couple. The girls’ ‘‘queer life trajectories’’
(Halberstam) challenge normative ways of doing gender and class and open up possibilities
for reading Price’s trilogy as a critique of neoliberalist and postfeminist
discourses of gender, class, identity and choice.
Keywords :
Gender Social class Feminist theory Queer theory Science fiction Susan Price
Journal title :
Childrens Literature in Education
Journal title :
Childrens Literature in Education