Yucky gets yummy: how speculative fiction creates society

  • PJ. Manney Crown College, UCSC
Keywords: empathy, fantasy, monster, other, science fiction, superheroes

Abstract

 Human biology creates empathy through storytelling and emulation. Throughout history, humans have honed their capacity to understand optimum storytelling and relate to others in new ways. The bioethical concepts of Leon Kass’s Wisdom of Repugnance and Arthur Caplan’s Yuck Factor attempt to describe, and in Kass’s case even support, society’s abhorrence of that which is strange, against God or nature, or simply the “other.” However, speculative fiction has been assessing the “other” for as long as we’ve told speculative stories. The last thousand years of social liberalization and technological progress in Western civilization can be linked to these stories through feedback loops of storytelling, technological inspiration and acceptance, and social change by growing the audience’s empathy for these speculative characters. Selecting highlights of speculative fiction as far back as the Bible and as recently as the latest movie blockbusters, society has grappled back and forth on whether monsters, superhumans, aliens, and the “other” are considered villainous, frightening and yucky, or heroic, aspirational and yummy. The larger historical arc of speculative fiction, technological acceptance and history demonstrates the clear shift from yucky to yummy. Works include The Bible, Talmud, stories of alchemists and the Brazen Head, Paradise Lost, Frankenstein, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, gothic horror films of Germany and the U.S., Superman and the Golden Age of comics, and recent blockbusters, among others.

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Author Biography

PJ. Manney, Crown College, UCSC

PJ. Manney is the author of the bestselling and Philip K. Dick Award nominated (R)EVOLUTION, and (ID)ENTITY, both in the Phoenix Horizon series. She is a former chairperson of Humanity+, author of "Empathy in the Time of Technology: How Storytelling is the Key to Empathy," (jetpress.org), frequent guest/host on podcasts including StarTalk and keynote speaker (recent: UCSC Social Fiction Conference). She has worked in motion-picture PR, story development and production for independent film production companies (Hook, Universal Soldier, it Could Happen to You), and writing for television (Hercules--The Legendary Journeys, Xena: Warrior Princess). Manney attended Wesleyan University, double majoring in Film and American Studies.

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Published
2019-10-09
How to Cite
Manney P. (2019). Yucky gets yummy: how speculative fiction creates society. Teknokultura. Journal of Digital Culture and Social Movements, 16(2), 243-254. https://doi.org/10.5209/tekn.64857