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Published byWinifred McDaniel Modified over 9 years ago
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June 18, 2015
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Myths and Innovation Our mythic imagination reflects our desires for mastery, magical or scientific Our mythic anxieties shape our resistance tp innovation and mastery
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Cultural Interpretation
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Biopolitics of Pop Culture Fantastic fiction shapes the public’s thinking about emerging technologies Frankenstein, Brave New World, Matrix, Gattaca become shorthand for commonsense objections Fantastic fiction depicts social and philosophical issues in abstracted form, more often with implicit bioconservative messages Utopias are boring, and complex futures take more work Radically transformed humanity is hard to empathize with We need more sophisticated pop culture images of the future
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Audience Trends The audience The evolving demographics of fantasy, SF, horror fans The expanding demographics of fantastic fiction in television, film and games Socio-political trends Anxieties about immigrants, minorities, foreign threats Anxieties about technology and personal identity The expansion of liberal democratic citizenship
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Media Influence Massification of fantastic literature, film and TV in 1980s Literary SF is more sophisticated than film and TV Literary SF more subcultural, film/TV SF more popular Film and TV have become darker and more complex My Favorite Martian, Mork and Mindy, Alf vs X-Files, Babylon Five, Battlestar Galactica
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Five Categories of Other Aliens Machine minds Animals modified for intelligence Post-humans Other intelligent species from Earth
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Top Grossing Films None of the top 25 grossing films of 1965 had non-human intelligence or future biotech 3.Guardians of the Galaxy – aliens 4.Captain America: The Winter Soldier – posthumans, aliens 6.The Hobbit pt 3 - – non-human intelligent species 7.Transformers: Age of Extinction – machine intelligence 8.Maleficent – non-human intelligent species 9.X-Men: Days of Future Past – post-humans 11.Dawn of the Planet of the Apes – uplifted animals 12.The Amazing Spider-Man 2 – post-humans 13.Godzilla – non-human intelligent species 15.Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles – uplifted animals 16.Interstellar – robots, aliens 17.How to Train Your Dragon 2 – non-human intelligent species 25.Lucy – post-humans
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Political-Economy Cycle Kiser and Drass (1983): # of utopian novels goes up with depressions and “hegemonic decline” in UK & US, 1883- 1975. Io9 analysis of Dr. Who’s revolutionary aspirations:
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US Imperialism & Prime Directive Annalee Newitz’ study
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Immigrants, Racism, Foreigners If negative Other images reflect xenophobia we would expect them in more xenophobic groups and times Since SF fans are more liberal, more positive depictions in lit than film and TV
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Expansion of Empathy, Citizenship Liberal democracies define citizenship based on psychological capacities, not physical characteristics This expands citizenship to non-human persons Withdraws citizenship from embryos and the brain- dead The Measure of Man
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SF Consumers are Different SF consumers were more opposed to animal experimentation especially for “higher” mammals Hughes, James. Aliens, Technology and Freedom: Science Fiction Consumption and Socio-Ethical Attitudes Futures Research Quarterly, Winter, 1995, 11(4): 39-58.
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Problems Cult favorites (Lord of the Rings, Evil Dead) Elite vs. mass influence (Lovecraft) Cumulative down list volume (monster movies) Extraordinarily positive Others, applications of tech Boundary definitions (supernatural creatures, talking cartoon animals) Minor characters versus major characters (Gremlins) Plot twists (silvers in Sarah Connor Chronicles)
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Anti-technology Tropes Novel technology causes evil, unintended consequences Deadalus & Icarus Evil scientists Dr. Faustus The desire for longevity mastery or intelligence is evil, has unintended consequences
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Evil, Tragic, Repentent Immortalists Most images of people who want more life are negative Only sanctioned salvation can provide immortality, otherwise its evil
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Doctor Frankenstein The desire to reanimate the dead will have bad, unintended consequences Dr. Frankenstein is willing to unleash those consequences in the thoughtless pursuit of scientific mastery Does it inform our thinking about cardiac defibrillators or organ transplantation?
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Animal Uplift and Chimeras The Island of Dr. Moreau (1896) Planet of the Apes (1963-2017) Splice (2009)
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Brave New World State managed eugenic inequality In-vitro fertilization? Free genomic choices in a democratic society? Birth control, sexual freedom Safe happiness drugs Have Prozac, sexual freedom and reproductive choice robbed us of humanity or distracted us from political struggle?
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Pro-technology Tropes Promethean tech heroes Wells’ Things to Come (1933, 1936) Millennialism & utopian future Verne, Bellamy, Gernsback, Star Trek Loyal servant
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Elisions of Star Trek Genetic engineering and cognitive enhancement are banned Limited use of the transporter Medical use explored in one episode AI is rare, and has a Pinnochio complex
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Genomic Choice Gattaca (1997) Its not evil to help parents have healthier kids That future could fix his heart Lying to NASA so you can die in space is not heroic
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Cloning Doppelgangers, evil twins and stolen identities Sleeper (1973) The Boys from Brazil (1978) The Sixth Day (2000) Star Wars: Attack of the Clones (2002) The Island (2005) Never Let Me Go (2010) Cloud Atlas (2012) Why would clones have fewer rights, or be more manipulable, than other humans?
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Servant Races Blade Runner (1982) Is the creation of genetically enhanced people evil? Or is corporate power, racism and the intentional engineering of subservience?
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Cloning Extinct Species Jurassic Park (1993-2015) Cloning a mammoth or a Neandrathal?
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Wireheading and Brain Pacemakers 1963: "Electrical self-stimulation of the brain in man." by Dr. Robert Heath."Electrical self-stimulation of the brain in man." 1972: Epileptic self-stimulated thousands of times for hours; “protested each time the unit was taken from him, pleading to self- stimulate just a few more times...” 1972 Terminal Man (book 1972, film 1974) Sleeper (1973) – Orb, Orgasmatron
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Cognitive Enhancement Flowers for Algernon (1959, Charly 1968) Awakenings (1990) Lawnmower Man (1992) Limitless (2011) Lucy (2014)
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Enhanced Soldiers Robocop (1987) Wolverine Captain America Countless others Is the problem militarism or the enhancements?
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What Kind of Images Do We Want? Orginal vision of cyberpunk: to break with utopian and dystopian visions, and depict a gritty future Beyond the demonized or valorized Other to the complex and gritty Other For culture creators and audiences to be as sensitive to biopolitical tropes as they are now to racist images
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