Thesis ID: CBB001560814

The Rhetoric of Repugnance: Popular Culture and Unpopular Notions in the Human Cloning Debate (2007)

unapi

Klein, Michael J. (Author)


Virginia Polytechnic Institute
Halfon, Saul E.
Hirsh, Richard F.


Publication Date: 2007
Edition Details: Advisor: Halfon, Saul E.; Richard F. Hirsh
Physical Details: 163 pp.
Language: English

An ethical frame grounded in science fiction literature shaped the discourse on cloning following the announcement of Dolly-the-sheep's birth through nuclear transfer. Using methodologies drawn from the social shaping of technology (SST) and rhetoric of science, my analysis demonstrates how individuals and institutions, including the media, ethicists, policymakers, and legislators, appropriated this ethical frame. In doing so, they employed science-fiction stories as rhetorical tropes, providing the public with a frame for understanding the social issues involved with cloning. However, these institutions used science fiction as a way to simplify and present ethical arguments that silenced dissent rather than encouraged dialog. While ethics discourse can validly make use of literature in debates about technology, such a simplistic view of the literature misrepresents the themes the authors explored in their works and limits discussion. I conclude by offering a deeper analysis and reading of some of these stories, relying on the texts themselves rather than the myths that have evolved around these texts as my primary source material. Such a reading provides a valuable counter-narrative to the on-going debate, one that more adequately explains the effects of technology in a society. In short, this dissertation demonstrates that the reductionist interpretation of works from the science fiction genre had real effects on policy formulation. People utilized their literary-derived perceptions of cloning in political discussions about technology. Thus, policy discussions of the perceived effects of the technology developed much of their meaning and significance from fictional depictions of the technology.

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Description Looks at how science fiction stories were utilized as a literary form to simplify ethcial arguments in the cloning debates after the birth of the first cloned sheep. Cited in Diss. Abstr. Int. A 69/01 (2008). Pub. no. AAT 3300053.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001560814/

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Authors & Contributors
Brandt, Christina
Dickson, Jessica
Yampell, Cat
Schwartz, Matthias
Schummer, Joachim
Sarantakes, Nicholas Evan
Concepts
Science fiction
Popular culture
Biotechnology
Cloning of organisms
Science and literature
Science and culture
Time Periods
20th century, late
21st century
20th century, early
20th century
Places
Germany
Edinburgh
United States
Soviet Union
Great Britain
Brazil
Institutions
Human Genome Project
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