Abjection of the Other in Richard Matheson’s I Am Legend: The Subject’s Deterrence Strategy for Becoming the Abject

Richard Matheson’s I Am Legend (1954) is about the volatile relationship between Robert Neville—the sole survivor of the human race—and vampires as the members of a brave new world order. While many critics tend to read the relationship between Robert and the vampires as the colonizer and the coloni...

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Main Author: Hossein Mohseni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lodz University Press 2023-11-01
Series:Text Matters
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Online Access:https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/textmatters/article/view/20983
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author Hossein Mohseni
author_facet Hossein Mohseni
author_sort Hossein Mohseni
collection DOAJ
description Richard Matheson’s I Am Legend (1954) is about the volatile relationship between Robert Neville—the sole survivor of the human race—and vampires as the members of a brave new world order. While many critics tend to read the relationship between Robert and the vampires as the colonizer and the colonized, this article sees the need to devise a paradigm to acknowledge the critical merits of all these postcolonial and racial readings without overemphasizing the validity of any of the mentioned readings at the expense of the other. The paradigm shows the journey of a subject who initially thought that he is in absolute control, but later is made to realize that, in his insistence on this position, he is actually being swayed towards marginalization and abjection. At the same time, the initially abject and marginalized vampires assume the position of dominance and normalcy at the end of the novel. In order to reach this understanding, the study draws on Julia Kristeva’s theoretical conceptualization of abjection.
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spelling doaj-art-742894288e8c44ebaa164d88f9b5fa632024-12-12T13:14:42ZengLodz University PressText Matters2083-29312084-574X2023-11-011346248110.18778/2083-2931.13.2421720Abjection of the Other in Richard Matheson’s I Am Legend: The Subject’s Deterrence Strategy for Becoming the AbjectHossein Mohseni0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0509-7959Shahid Beheshti University, TehranRichard Matheson’s I Am Legend (1954) is about the volatile relationship between Robert Neville—the sole survivor of the human race—and vampires as the members of a brave new world order. While many critics tend to read the relationship between Robert and the vampires as the colonizer and the colonized, this article sees the need to devise a paradigm to acknowledge the critical merits of all these postcolonial and racial readings without overemphasizing the validity of any of the mentioned readings at the expense of the other. The paradigm shows the journey of a subject who initially thought that he is in absolute control, but later is made to realize that, in his insistence on this position, he is actually being swayed towards marginalization and abjection. At the same time, the initially abject and marginalized vampires assume the position of dominance and normalcy at the end of the novel. In order to reach this understanding, the study draws on Julia Kristeva’s theoretical conceptualization of abjection.https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/textmatters/article/view/20983legendmathesonvampireskristevaabject
spellingShingle Hossein Mohseni
Abjection of the Other in Richard Matheson’s I Am Legend: The Subject’s Deterrence Strategy for Becoming the Abject
Text Matters
legend
matheson
vampires
kristeva
abject
title Abjection of the Other in Richard Matheson’s I Am Legend: The Subject’s Deterrence Strategy for Becoming the Abject
title_full Abjection of the Other in Richard Matheson’s I Am Legend: The Subject’s Deterrence Strategy for Becoming the Abject
title_fullStr Abjection of the Other in Richard Matheson’s I Am Legend: The Subject’s Deterrence Strategy for Becoming the Abject
title_full_unstemmed Abjection of the Other in Richard Matheson’s I Am Legend: The Subject’s Deterrence Strategy for Becoming the Abject
title_short Abjection of the Other in Richard Matheson’s I Am Legend: The Subject’s Deterrence Strategy for Becoming the Abject
title_sort abjection of the other in richard matheson s i am legend the subject s deterrence strategy for becoming the abject
topic legend
matheson
vampires
kristeva
abject
url https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/textmatters/article/view/20983
work_keys_str_mv AT hosseinmohseni abjectionoftheotherinrichardmathesonsiamlegendthesubjectsdeterrencestrategyforbecomingtheabject