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        The Dark Posthuman

        Dehumanization, Technology, and the Atlantic World

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        Author(s)
        Polsky, Stephanie
        Collection
        ScholarLed
        Language
        English
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        Abstract
        The Dark Posthuman: Dehumanization, Technology, and the Atlantic World explores how liberal humanism first enlivened, racialized, and gendered global cartographies, and how memory, ancestry, expression, and other aspects of social identity founded in its theories and practices made for the advent of the category of the posthuman through the dimensions of cultural, geographic, political, social, and scientific classification. The posthuman is very much the product of world-building narratives that have their beginnings in the commercial franchise and are fundamentally rooted in science, governance, and economics around the hegemonic appropriation of environments and commodification of bodies that initially fuelled white settler life worlds and continue to be operational in the way we conceive of these worlds as continuous ontological formations. The want has always been for ownership of any of these dimensions of being without regard to condition, to not remain stranded as the subsidiary of another’s being, to another’s claim to humanity, and finally, to escape the suffocating confines of an instrumental ontology that suggests a subcategory of humanity without rights onto itself. The Dark Posthuman distinguishes the posthuman’s place within both the liberal and neoliberal imaginary and reveals how its appearance first entrenched itself through the avarice of English settler colonialism, and subsequently, through the paranoia of American slavery. This same figure of the posthuman played a crucial role in the functional adaptation of Cold War behavioural cybernetics, and thereafter, in the fetishization of technology within the era of global financialization. The shadowing of this arrangement during and beyond the long duration of humanity’s domination of this world becomes the structural web work of this book.
        URI
        https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/58464
        Keywords
        capitalism;colonialism;ecology;liberalism;posthumanism;race;technology
        DOI
        10.53288/0381.1.00
        ISBN
        9781685710712, 9781685710705
        Publisher
        punctum books
        Publisher website
        https://punctumbooks.com/
        Publication date and place
        Brooklyn, NY, 2022
        Classification
        Ethical issues: scientific, technological and medical developments
        Impact of science and technology on society
        Pages
        432
        Rights
        https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
        • Imported or submitted locally

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        License

        • If not noted otherwise all contents are available under Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

        Credits

        • logo EU
        • This project received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 683680, 810640, 871069 and 964352.

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