TY - CHAP
T1 - Transformation as the Nature of Things
T2 - Queering the Non/Human in Qing Dynasty Zhiguai
AU - Whyke, Thomas William
AU - Brown, Melissa Shani
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - This chapter is the first of two chapters exploring shapeshifting and somatic instability in zhiguai tales. Here, we focus upon the queer figure of the ‘non/human’ (vis-à-vis Giffney and Hird et al., eds., Queering the Non/Human, Ashgate, Hampshire and Burlington, 2008), considering how transforming objects and the blurred boundaries between humans and animals destabilise anthropocentrism. We consider the ways in which such shapeshifting troubles the relationship between bodies and identities, and also brings humans and non/humans into ethical relationships with one another. Such shapeshifting is not always depicted positively, however, and there are also patterns correlating women with animals, and becoming-animal as a form of punishment. Tracing the valence of some of these transformations, we explore how identity hierarchies remain in operation despite (or rather, within) such transformations, and the linking of forms of deviance (including sexual) with non/humanity.
AB - This chapter is the first of two chapters exploring shapeshifting and somatic instability in zhiguai tales. Here, we focus upon the queer figure of the ‘non/human’ (vis-à-vis Giffney and Hird et al., eds., Queering the Non/Human, Ashgate, Hampshire and Burlington, 2008), considering how transforming objects and the blurred boundaries between humans and animals destabilise anthropocentrism. We consider the ways in which such shapeshifting troubles the relationship between bodies and identities, and also brings humans and non/humans into ethical relationships with one another. Such shapeshifting is not always depicted positively, however, and there are also patterns correlating women with animals, and becoming-animal as a form of punishment. Tracing the valence of some of these transformations, we explore how identity hierarchies remain in operation despite (or rather, within) such transformations, and the linking of forms of deviance (including sexual) with non/humanity.
KW - Animals and nature in Chinese philosophy
KW - Anthropological machine
KW - Critical anthropomorphism
KW - Gender
KW - Non/humans
KW - Queer theory
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85169039798&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/978-981-99-4258-9_3
DO - 10.1007/978-981-99-4258-9_3
M3 - Book Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85169039798
T3 - Palgrave Series in Asia and Pacific Studies
SP - 81
EP - 108
BT - Palgrave Series in Asia and Pacific Studies
PB - Springer
ER -