top of page

Vortrag "Artificial Bodies, Naked Truths" an der Harvard Universität

  • lilenz
  • vor 21 Stunden
  • 1 Min. Lesezeit

"Since the late nineteenth century, a range of experts have questioned the boundaries between “organic” and “artificial,” envisioning the human body as resembling or being enhanced by machines. In Jinzō Ningen (Artificial Human, 1928) the prominent intellectual Hirabayashi Hatsunosuke promised: the “invention of an artificial human would overturn traditional law.” More recently, under the impact of posthumanist technologies and claims, scholars across disciplines have suggested that we have become “posthuman” in the sense that we have crossed a threshold. One strand of critique has questioned the figure of the human implicitly produced within such claims. In Genèse (Genesis, 1982), Michel Serres mused that we might have never been human, at least not in the ways posthumanists insinuate that the human had previously been whole. This talk builds on these critiques, proposing that nowhere has the notion of the human as whole been farther from actual experience than in modern war."


Speaker: SABINE FRÜHSTÜCK, Distinguished Professor and Koichi Takashima Chair in Japanese Cultural Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara

Moderator: ANDREW D. GORDON, Lee and Juliet Folger Fund Professor of History, Harvard University


Datum: 27. Februar

Zeit: 16-17:30 Uhr

Ort: Harvard Universität



 
 
 

Kommentare


bottom of page