Stop trying to live my life for me
I need to breathe
I'm not your robot
Stop telling me I'm part of the big machine
I'm breaking free
Can't you see
I can love, I can speak, without somebody else operating me
You gave me eyes so now I see
I'm not your robot
I'm just me.
—Miley Cyrus, “Robot” (2010)
“You’re a unique robot, Andrew. I feel a responsibility to help you become … whatever you’re able to be.”
— Bicentennial Man (1999, dir. Chris Columbus)
1. Believe in the ArchAndroid.
2. If you see your neighbor jamming harder than you, covet his or her jam.
3. Be aware that jamming means: no tweeting without clapping, no sex without screaming and no freedom without dancing.
—Janelle Monáe, The 10 Droid Commandments, 1–3 (undated, ~2010)
During the last two years, robots like Pepper and Nao have been tested as companions and proxy-nurses in care homes for elderly people, the Chinese female robot Sophia was given Saudi Arabian citizenship (in some ways granting it more rights than women have in the country), and the first brothels for sexbots (sex dolls with a programmable personality and speech recognition/simulation) have been opened in North America and Europe. We can expect robots with gendered bodies and simulated personalities who engage in human-like interaction and communication to enter many aspects of our public and personal lives in the near future.
While robotics of this kind is still young, the literary history of artificial beings endowed with life and consciousness is as old as mankind, going back to various creation myths where man is made from clay, to Ovid’s Pygmalion whose beloved statue Galatea is given life by Aphrodite; via medieval Jewish golem stories, Frankenstein’s monster (1818), or the wooden puppet Pinocchio who wants to be a real boy (1883); to the clockwork women Olimpia in Hoffmann’s The Sandman (1816) and Hadaly in Villiers’s Tomorrow’s Eve (1886) who are the perfect objects of desire for disappointed men.
Over the entire twentieth century, science fiction media have featured artificial beings, and in the first two decades of the twenty-first century the representation of androids, cyborgs, and clones in literature, film, TV, video games, and music has been engaged intensely with both ontological questions of selfhood and consciousness, and ethical questions of the autonomy and rights of artificial beings.
In this seminar, we will look at cultural productions and representations of these artificial beings. We will investigate current phenomena, like e.g. sexbots, and the cultural reaction to these phenomena as well as fictional media that engages with the topic. The theoretical focus will be on bodies, i.e. androids as artificial physical interlocutors, created and shaped to carry specific meanings, programmed to perform specific actions, built to be used, touched, talked to in specific ways. Theoretical frameworks of embodiment (Foucault and others) and performance (Butler and others) are important here, as is, obviously, feminist and queer theory in general.
Participation Requirements
This seminar is opened for the advanced modules VM 5.2, VM 5.3, and VM 6.1. You should have completed BM2 and either PM2 or PM3; or have other previous experience with theory-guided analysis of culture and literature.
I won’t send anyone away who does not fulfil the requirements but is genuinely interested. Just be prepared to work your ass off.
Required Reading
For this seminar, you are required to read the following novel and short stories and to watch the following film and TV series episode:
Further Reading
Here is a preliminary long list of additional media that you can check out if you want (e.g. to find a topic for the Studienleistung or a module paper):
Frequency | Weekday | Time | Format / Place | Period | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
weekly | Mo | 12-14 | T2-205 | 01.04.-12.07.2019
not on: 4/22/19 / 6/10/19 |
|
weekly | Mo | 16-19 | C01-273 | 01.04.-12.07.2019 |
Module | Course | Requirements | |
---|---|---|---|
23-ANG-AngVM5 Vertiefungsmodul 5: Theories & Ideologies | VM 5.2 Literary Theory | Study requirement
|
Student information |
VM 5.3 Cultural Theory | Study requirement
|
Student information | |
- | Graded examination | Student information | |
23-ANG-AngVM6 Vertiefungsmodul 6: Media, Arts & Communication | VM 6.1 Theoretical and Historical Contexts | Study requirement
|
Student information |
- | Ungraded examination | Student information | |
30-MGS-5_ver1 Hauptmodul 4: Körper und Gesundheit | Seminar 1 | Study requirement
|
Student information |
Seminar 2 | Study requirement
Graded examination |
Student information |
The binding module descriptions contain further information, including specifications on the "types of assignments" students need to complete. In cases where a module description mentions more than one kind of assignment, the respective member of the teaching staff will decide which task(s) they assign the students.