The research article analyzes Patricia Lockwood’s debut novel No One Is Talking About This from the perspective of the feminist philosopher and the posthuman critic, Rosi Braidotti’s Zoe-Centered Ethics. The novel delves into two distinct narrative focus. It traces the narrator’s journey from disembodied digital self to embodied caregiving, that she extends for her niece diagnosed with a rare medical illness. Applying Rosi Braidotti’s concepts of Zoe, affirmative ethics and nomadic subjectivity from the book, The Posthuman and Posthuman Knowledge reveals how the novel repositions vulnerability and disability as catalysts for ethical transformation. While the novel has often been analyzed from the view of Posthuman Trauma theory, this paper adopts a divergent perspective, emphasizing the narrator’s affirmative turn - moving from detachment and disembodiment towards care, relationality and an embodied engagement with life.
Valentina et al. (Sun,) studied this question.