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Refusing the Child: Weininger, Edelman, Kertész

Ní Dhúill, Caitriona

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Authors

Caitriona Ní Dhúill



Abstract

If human reproduction is a realm of future-making practice, its refusal or absence effects a reconceptualization of the future. The article examines three very different refusals of the child: the idealist antinatalism of Otto Weininger's Sex and Character (1903), the queer refusal of reproductive futurism in Lee Edelman's No Future (2004), and the negation of the thinkability of fatherhood through the trauma of Auschwitz in Imre Kertész's Kaddish for a Child Not Born (1990). The complexity and incommensurability of the critical stances of antireproductive antifuturism articulated in these texts make it necessary to reconsider any overly simplistic or affirmative alignment of “the child” with “the future.” The nonreproductive (non)futures the texts variously envisage call on us to think instead in terms of multiple possible meanings that can inhere in refusals of the child — whether in the asceticist-misogynist, queer, or catastrophic mode

Citation

Ní Dhúill, C. (2016). Refusing the Child: Weininger, Edelman, Kertész. Poetics Today: International Journal for Theory and Analysis of Literature and Communication, 37(3), 369-385. https://doi.org/10.1215/03335372-3599315

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 1, 2016
Online Publication Date Aug 30, 2016
Publication Date Jan 1, 2016
Deposit Date Jan 5, 2017
Publicly Available Date Jan 6, 2017
Journal Poetics Today: International Journal for Theory and Analysis of Literature and Communication
Print ISSN 0333-5372
Electronic ISSN 1527-5507
Publisher Duke University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 37
Issue 3
Pages 369-385
DOI https://doi.org/10.1215/03335372-3599315
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1367730

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Copyright Statement
© 2016 by Porter Institute for Poetics and Semiotics






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