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Dystopias of Reproductive Nightmares: The Ice People and The Children of Men

dc.contributor.authorÇETİNER, Niğmet
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-04T16:09:59Z
dc.date.issued2021-12-31
dc.description.abstractMaggie Gee’s The Ice People (1998) and Phyllis Dorothy James’s The Children of Men (1992) are two dystopian novels introducing societies afflicted with infertility because of scientific advancements that have spun out of control. In the novels, science gives way to countless innovations that provide help and comfort in daily life. However, it falls short of determining the exact reason and finding any solution for the problem of infertility. The root cause for this calamity is suggested to be the anthropogenic activities deteriorating nonhuman environments and causing reproductive health problems. Set in Britain in 2050, Gee’s The Ice People portrays a world at the onset of a new ice age. Picturing a world after the global warming during which fertility rates decline dramatically, the novel presents a new type of human, techfixes, the children born through artificial conception, owing to the developments in science and technology. P. D. James describes a world where people abruptly become infertile in1995, which she calls the Year Omega in the novel. Mass infertility which threatens the existence of the humankind results in cruelty against the remaining aging population inflicted by the tyrannical government that never faces resistance from people. In line with this, the aim of this study is to analyze The Ice People and The Children of Men as works of dystopian fiction describing the ramifications of the misuse of science and technology, and the anthropogenic imprint on the nonhuman environment, which comes out as reproductive inability in human beings.
dc.description.urihttps://doi.org/10.29110/soylemdergi.1012406
dc.description.urihttps://dergipark.org.tr/en/download/article-file/2037101
dc.description.urihttps://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/soylemdergi/issue/67644/1012406
dc.identifier.doi10.29110/soylemdergi.1012406
dc.identifier.eissn2548-0502
dc.identifier.endpage657
dc.identifier.openairedoi_dedup___::79920e13651c6c05d111040bec545de2
dc.identifier.orcid0000-0003-0229-6338
dc.identifier.startpage645
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12597/39318
dc.identifier.volume6
dc.publisherSOYLEM Filoloji Dergisi
dc.relation.ispartofSöylem Filoloji Dergisi
dc.rightsOPEN
dc.subjectMaggie Gee
dc.subjectP. D. James
dc.subjectinfertility
dc.subjectdystopya
dc.subjectinsan olmayan çevreler.
dc.subjectSanat ve Edebiyat
dc.subjectMaggie Gee
dc.subjectP. D. James
dc.subjectinfertility
dc.subjectdystopia
dc.subjectnonhuman environments.
dc.subjectCreative Arts and Writing
dc.subject.sdg5. Gender equality
dc.subject.sdg13. Climate action
dc.titleDystopias of Reproductive Nightmares: The Ice People and The Children of Men
dc.typeArticle
dspace.entity.typePublication
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