This dissertation investigates the construction and representation of the monstrous masculine in contemporary science fiction cinema. That is to say, men who undergo a striking metamorphosis resulting in the blurring of binaries such as masculine/feminine, human/machine and self/other. A close-reading of key films and a consideration of their historical and socio-cultural contexts serves to identify and explore the mechanisms at work in the formation of male monsters as well as examining the growing presence and influence of technology and posthuman ideas in the portrayal of monstrous men. The five chapters consider five recurrent figures of monstrous masculinity: the mutant, the disempowered cyborg, the cyborg super villain, the alien and the transhuman. Ultimately, the thesis addresses the question as to why masculine characters so often undergo profound, often painful, corporeal and psychological transformations.
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