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Surpassing our genes: The subversive post-human message of 'Gattaca'
Author(s) -
Emily D. Klein,
Leah Ceccarelli
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
mètode. annual review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2174-9221
pISSN - 2174-3487
DOI - 10.7203/metode.12.20673
Subject(s) - dystopia , reading (process) , bioethics , public opinion , the imaginary , perfectionism (psychology) , public discourse , sociology , psychology , political science , social psychology , psychoanalysis , law , politics
The movie Gattaca is often referenced in public debates about the societal dangers of human gene editing. In the public imaginary, its message is clear: the dystopian future it portrays stands as a warning against the societal acceptance of genetic perfectionism and genetic discrimination. This article argues that such a reading misses a deeper message of this cinematic text. Rather than offer a bioethics lesson against the use of genetics to make better human babies, in our opinion, the film actually argues that such genetic tampering is unlikely to succeed, but that the genetic engineering of a superior post-human individual is both possible and desirable.

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