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[Commlist] Call for papers: Cybernetics in Science Fiction
Wed Sep 13 10:54:58 GMT 2023
Call for papers: Cybernetics in Science Fiction
When artist Neil Harbisson implanted a cyborg antenna in his head to
extend and augment the range of colours his eyes could perceive, it
marked a potential turning point in the relationship between art and
cybernetics.[i] <#_edn1> Conversely, the concept of Artificial
Intelligence continues to create a chasm of anxiety between the
possibilities for human progress and its imagined demise.
The use of chatbots to potentially create student essays has created
shockwaves within academia itself, but in a wider sense, alarmist
scenarios, including from the pioneers of the technology itself
(Geoffrey Hinton),[ii] <#_edn2> echo the dystopian imagination of
science fiction narratives, suggesting the ongoing, symbiotic
relationship between art and reality.
Cybernetics has been in the English language since 1948, borrowing from
both the language and philosophy of classical Greek for /kubernetes/,
the steersman of a ship. Meaning at core the feedback loops or
mechanisms through a mechanical or animal system, the cybernetic ideas
of Norbert Wiener have proved pervasive in science and the popular
understanding of science. The advent of ChatGPT and other Artificial
Intelligence and the multitude of terms that begin with the prefix
‘cyber’ attest to the enduring and still expanding understandings of
cybernetics. Scientifically informed science fiction writers have
continually found inspiration in cybernetics. A major work, Patricia
Warrick’s /The Cybernetic Imagination in Science Fiction /explored the
multiple interpretations of cybernetics in post-war science fiction.
That work came out in 1980 and since then, few larger scale studies of
cybernetics in science fiction have appeared.
However, cybernetics themselves remain a compelling source of
inspiration. Among the most notable may be the Cybermen of /Doctor Who/,
the Cybernauts of /The Avengers /and /The New Avengers/, and the Borg of
/Star Trek/, from /The Next Generation /to /Picard. /Yet these famous
examples may not necessarily distil cybernetics with any particular
degree of accuracy, proposing a science fiction version of cybernetics
related to spare part surgery and the replacement of body parts rather
than to a systems theory. Thus, the cyborg (a synthesis of cyborg and
organism) is the most commonly visible iteration of cybernetic concepts,
ranging from the mainstream televisual series /The/ /Bionic Woman/
(1976-78) and /The Six-Million Dollar Man/ (1973-1978) to the villains
of science-fiction and horror in /Star Wars/ (Darth Vader, General
Grievous) and /The Terminator/ franchise.
Yet the point of fiction is not to be instrumentalist but to give
creative expression to the range of possibilities (and fears) that the
concept of cybernetics itself proposes rather than to strict conceptual
accuracy. This call for papers is for chapters on how cybernetics has
been imagined, including those taking note of differences between
science fiction and real-world applications. It is anticipated that a
focus on the different paths taken by science fiction and science will
be analytically fruitful. Contributions on mainstream, screen versions
of the cyborg as 'replacement parts' are welcome. Papers on the wider
print tradition and on the scientific verisimilitude of cybernetics are
also encouraged.
There is a diversity of genres and works that could be considered as
well as a rich number of themes including, but by no means limited to:
* Disability, spare parts, and surgery
* Cybernetic modification
* The ‘Whiteness’ of cybernetics
* Trans-generic cybernetics
* Global representations of cybernetics
* Videogames (/Mortal Kombat/ e.g.)
* Anime (/Ghost in the Shell/ e.g.)
* Cybernetics in popular franchises (/Doctor Who, Star Wars/, /Star
Trek/, /The Terminator/, Marvel/DC etc.)
* Gender and Cybernetics
* Cybernetics and ‘futurism’
* The posthuman experience
* Technophobia
* Cyperpunk
Proposals from different national contexts and through the lens of
diversity will be especially welcome.
We are in discussion about this project with a British publisher.
*/Advice for contributors/*
If you are interested in contributing to this collection, we ask that
you submit an abstract of up to *250 words* explaining the focus and
approach your proposed essay as well as a brief biography of *50
words*. The proposed volume is intended to be scholarly but accessible
in tone and approach. Each contribution should be around *6000 words*.
Abstracts should be emailed to (Marcus.harmes /at/ usq.edu.au)
<mailto:(Marcus.harmes /at/ usq.edu.au)> and (Mark.Fryers /at/ open.ac.uk)
<mailto:(Mark.Fryers /at/ open.ac.uk)> *by September 15th 2023*and contributors
with successful abstracts will be notified in early October.
Full chapters would be expected by*April 26^th 2024. *
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