MAPACA

Mid-Atlantic Popular &
American Culture Association

User menu

Skip to menu

You are here

Disability, Monstrosity, and Visibility in Katherine Dunne's Geek Love

Presenter: 
Stephanie Flint
Presentation type: 
Paper
Abstract: 

Katherine Dunne’s Geek Love features a world of the Binewski Fabulon: a traveling circus side show starring the owners’ children—strategically engineered “freaks” with extraordinary bodies—where extraordinary bodies are the norm and “normies” are seen as of lesser value. In this world, the concept of the monster becomes challenged, as does the concept of the able body and mind. Children who are seen as too normal are threatened to be cast out of the Fabulon; “Normies” are murderous threats; one child, Arty, begins a death cult that preys on “normies”; and the youngest child, Chick, looks like a “normie” but has dangerous telekinetic powers. In all of these aspects, Geek Love presents the many angles that monstrosity can take, and the lack of cut-and-dry distinction that such a concept proposes.

Through the context of Katherine Dunne’s Geek Love, I will put monster studies (including work by Jefferey Jerome Cohen, Jack Halberstam, Margarit Schildrick and Bernadette Calafell) and disability studies (including Rosemary Garland Thomson, Lennard J. Davis, and Leslie Fiedler) in conversation with one another, focusing on the relationship between monstrosity and visibility, particularly with regard to the representation of the disabled body and mind in American culture. I will explore the ways in which monstrosity and disability are exhibited in Dunne’s work, through examination of major characters and popular culture—particularly with regard to monsters and the “freak show”— as represented in the text. In particular, I will focus on character Chick Binewski, the child who looks like a “normie” but has supernatural powers, causing him to serve as a representative of cognitive disability in the context of this world. Chick’s lack of visible difference, yet dangerous internal difference, brings about the challenge of cognitive disability in disability studies (referred to by Davis as “the specter haunting the normality of our time.”)

Scheduled on: 
Friday, November 9, 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm

About the presenter

Stephanie Flint

Stephanie is a PhD candidate in Florida Atlantic University’s Comparative Studies program. Her research focuses on monstrosity in literature, film and popular culture, particularly from the perspective of disability theory, reception theory and psychoanalytic theory.

Session information

Struggles of Disability Representation in the Mainstream

Friday, November 9, 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm (Caswell)

These three papers demonstrate the challenge inherent in visibility and representation in mainstream media. Each paper questions the ways disability is represented, such as the way FX’s Legion uses schizophrenia as a metaphor, the way that Geek Love marks the distinction between “freaks and normies,” and the ways Paralympians and Invictus Games athletes are taking control of their own narratives on social media.

Back to top