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Preliminary communication

https://doi.org/10.21860/j.14.1.9

Cross-Species Hybrids and Bioethics in Early Soviet Fiction

Henrietta Mondry orcid id orcid.org/0000-0001-6354-4847 ; Department of Global, Languages and Cultural Studies, Faculty of Arts, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand


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Abstract

My article addresses issues of bioethics in cross-species hybridism raised in Robert and Beylis’ well-known “Crossing species boundaries” (2003) and the ensuing discussion by examination of two important stories written in the Soviet 1920s, “A Dog’s Heart” and “The Amphibian Man”. I argue that these two fictional narratives show that literature not only responds to changing trends in biological sciences but also heuristically considers and intuits wider social implications of radical experimentation. My approach is both synchronic and diachronic as I demonstrate that while being grounded in the same reformative atmosphere of the 1920s, the two texts present divergent responses to the issue of cross-species hybridism relevant for our contemporary debates. In particular, I deal with the notions of man playing God, species identity in analogy to ‘race’, procreation of human-animal hybrids, and also consider the relevance of culture-specific concepts of charismatic and distant species for cross-species discourse.

Keywords

human-animal hybridism; species identity; bioethics and experiments in Soviet fiction and science

Hrčak ID:

309393

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/309393

Publication date:

2.11.2023.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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