The Fraternity of Post-human Bodies. Science-Fiction as a Space of Reproduction and Resistance to Traditional Masculine Imagery"

Authors

  • María Ruido

Abstract

This paper analyses the representations of the body present in contemporary science-fiction literature and film. Using theoretical concepts by Althusser, Foucault and Haraway, the text establishes first a typology of cybernetic organisms in contemporary culture and reviews its presence and ideological implications in films like Robocop (1987), Johny Mnemonic (1995) or Matrix (1999). The paper argues for a self-conscience as political and historical subjects in order to avoid falling into a fallacious cyberandroginy that reinfornces phallogocentric power structures.

Published

2004-01-11

How to Cite

[1]
Ruido, M. 2004. The Fraternity of Post-human Bodies. Science-Fiction as a Space of Reproduction and Resistance to Traditional Masculine Imagery". Lectora: Journal of Women and Textuality. 10 (Jan. 2004), 103–113.