Surrogate Humanity
Race, Robots, and the Politics of Technological Futures
Kalindi Vora author Neda Atanasoski author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Duke University Press
Published:29th Mar '19
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£20.99(9781478003861)
This insightful book examines how technology, particularly robots and AI, serves as substitutes for human labor, reinforcing existing inequalities. Surrogate Humanity critiques these dynamics.
In Surrogate Humanity, Neda Atanasoski and Kalindi Vora explore the complex relationship between technology and labor, specifically focusing on how robots and artificial intelligence are increasingly used as substitutes for human workers. They delve into the implications of this trend within a labor system that is deeply rooted in racial capitalism and patriarchy. By examining a wide array of technologies, from sex robots to military drones, the authors shed light on how these innovations often reflect and reinforce existing societal inequalities.
The book presents a critical analysis of how liberal structures of antiblackness, settler colonialism, and patriarchal values shape human-machine interactions. Atanasoski and Vora argue that while advancements in technology may promise a new, revolutionary future, they frequently replicate historical patterns of exploitation and dispossession. This results in a troubling cycle where the very definitions of humanity and labor are redefined in ways that devalue certain groups based on race and gender.
Despite these challenges, Surrogate Humanity also opens up a dialogue about the potential for alternative engineering practices that challenge the racial and colonial logics embedded in current technological developments. The authors call for a reimagining of how we approach technology and labor, advocating for models that promote equity and social justice rather than perpetuating existing hierarchies.
“By bringing a much more nuanced reading of race, gender, and difference to science and technology studies, Atanasoski and Vora provoke us to think more deeply about how our imagined technological futures always already serve to reproduce our most problematic pasts—and what forms or processes can disrupt and transcend these. This is a vital project that should speak to us all.” -- Barbara Herr Harthorn * American Ethnologist *
“Surrogate Humanity...confirm[s] that the human is a contingent concept.... The authors also spotlight how contemporary discourses concerning automation, in particular, alternately promise liberation and threaten debasement while eliding the roles of racialized and colonial subjects in producing the technologies and materials on which automation relies.” -- Rebecah Pulsifer * Women's Studies Quarterly *
“...Surrogate Humanity usefully provides examples from literary, artistic, engineering, and scientific projects that critique or outright refuse technoliberalism’s frame for recognizing full humanity. These rebellious acts of imagination show us that the potential exists to develop alternative designs and trajectories for technological development ... in ways that prioritize equity and justice.” -- Anita Lam * Surveillance & Society *
“Surrogate Humanity is a fascinating and important book that provides a much-needed counter narrative to prevailing approaches in science and technology studies.... Complemented by their mode of collaborative writing as a radical feminist act, the book is thus certain to inspire scholars and activists alike....” -- Sibille Merz * Ethnic and Racial Studies *
“Atanasoski and Vora’s major intervention in the automation debate is their argument that automation imaginaries are shaped by liberal humanism and the racial hierarchies embedded in it.... One strength of Surrogate Humanity is the range of technological discourses, objects, and processes in which the authors elucidate the logics of technoliberalism.” -- J. Jesse Ramírez * American Quarterly *
“Atanasoski andVora write with thoughtful scholarship and careful word selection.... [Surrogate Humanity] also provides a generative grounding in relevant science and technology studies and race theory literatures.... [I]t should be required reading in any sociology course on colonization and empire.” -- Laurel Smith-Doerr * Contemporary Sociology *
“Surrogate Humanity questions what it means to be human at all, and is an incredibly useful analysis for anyone interested in shifting from thinking about robots within a tool-using paradigm, to an ethics paradigm.” -- Lindsay Balfour * Cultural Studies *
ISBN: 9781478003175
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 454g
256 pages