Ebenezer Scrooge In Edelman's No Future

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In Chapter two of Edelman ‘No Future’ (2004) ‘sinthomosexulaity’, Edelman examines Ebenezer Scrooge in the Christmas Carol (1843). Scrooge’s character plays no attention to the political economy of reproduction not following the normative social subjects. Scrooge becomes pressured by society in order to change which puts pressures on his queerness, Edelman expresses ‘Christmas here stands in the place of the obligatory collective reproduction of the Child, the obligatory investment in the social precisely as the order of the child’ (Edelman, 2004: 45). Thus, Edelman proposes that he supports the acts that Scrooge is making because he likes that he is anti-social and it is suggested that he goes as far as to praise Ebenezer Scrooge’s original

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