Ecocatastrophe in Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake
Öz
Anahtar Kelimeler
ecocatastrophe, apocalypticism, genetic engineering, overpopulation
Kaynakça
- Akhmedov, Rafael (2020). The Concepts of Development and Degeneration in American Apocalyptic Science Fiction. 3L: The Southeast Asian Journal of English Language Studies, Vol. 31 (1), 57-68.
- Atwood, Margaret (2003). Oryx and Crake. New York: Anchor Books.
- Buell, Lawrence (1995). The Environmental Imagination: Thoreau, Nature Writing, and the Formation of American Culture. Cambridge: Belknap.
- Garrard, Greg (2004). Ecocriticism. New York: Routledge.
- Malthus, Thomas (1998). An Essay on the Principle of Population. Electronic Scholarly Publishing Project.
- Özmen, Cansu Özge, Vardar, Nergiz Öznur (2019). Posthuman and Human-Nonhuman Relationship in Oryx and Crake. Humanitas, 7 (13), 148-158.
- Pedron, Colin Francisco (2016). Breaking New Barriers: A Study of How Natural Boundaries Usurp Divine Boundaries in Modern Post-Apocalyptic Literature. Bachelor’s Degree Thesis, University of Arizona.
- Sanderson, Jay (2013). Pigoons, Rakunks and Crakers: Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake and Genetically Engineered Animals in a (Latourian) Hybrid World. Law and Humanities, 7 (2), 218-240.
- Stein, Stephen J. (2000). Encyclopedia of Apocalypticism: Volume 3: Apocalypticism in Modern Period and the Contemporary Age. Continuum.
- Wochele, Nikola (2012). Ecological and Ethical Dystopia in Atwood’s Oryx and Crake and The Year of the Flood. Unpublished Master’s Thesis, Wien: Universitat Wien.
