Repeat After Me: You Are A Cyborg...
The age of Cyborgs is here! In fact, it’s been here for a while now. Or at least, it is if you believe people like Donna Haraway and Amber Case. “What in the world is that supposed to mean” You ask? Well, there is an article written about Donna Haraway back in 1997 (by Hari Kunzru) and even at that time, Haraway had been describing herself as a cyborg for a while. This may seem odd, because smartphones weren’t even a thing back then, but for Haraway (and many others) being a cyborg is not the same as the futuristic sci-fi-esque half-human-half-machine that most of us are imagining right now.
To Haraway, being a cyborg is about networks, and about “an alliance between (wo)man, machinery, and new technology.” We may not necessarily have superpower-granting-implants (though those do in fact also exist) but over the years humans and technology have created an almost inseparable bond. There are an incredibly large amount of things in our day to day life that wouldn’t be possible anymore without technology (See Amber Case’ TED talk). To Haraway, Case, and many others, this means that we have basically become cyborgs?
Does that thought freak you out? Think about the role that technology plays in your daily life? What are you using to read this right now? Is it perhaps that smartphone that, as some (like one of my favorites: Banksy) have suggested, has become glued to our hand?
Sorry, I didn’t mean to get so existential. But I do think they are ideas worthy of giving some thought. After all, these are questions of identity and what it means for us to define ourselves as humans (or cyborgs).
To me, one of the most interesting parts of the article about Donna Haraway, is the significance it brings forth between cyborgs, technology, and oppressed minorities. Didn’t see that one coming, right? Or maybe you did. Because, when I read that “The cyborg idea may in the end be Donna Haraway’s way of showing us how to let folks be folks, rather than carving them up into cruel, arbitrary divisions.” I suddenly made connections between this cyborg idea any many other artists that have used the metaphors and visuals of cyborgs and androids to deal with different parts of their identity. Right away, Janelle Monáe and her “Dirty Computers” come to mind. Her most recent album exists in a reality where all humans have turned into computers, and if you don’t fit the mold (in other words belong to any minority) you are Dirty. (oh man I could write an entire blog about Janelle tbh). But she’s not the only one. Other artists, like Years and Years, have also felt a connection to cyborgs as a way to deal with sexuality.
I leave you to think about why it is that artist and other creative minded people like us feel this connection to ‘obscure’ and futuristic ideas of technology.