the thing about being a scholar of scifi studies (the degree im inventing and forcing my uni to give me lol) is that you develop Very Strong Feelings about the work of doug vakoch


#batman#bruce wayne#batfam#dick grayson#tim drake#batfamily#dc fanart

seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from Malaysia
seen from Italy

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from Ukraine
seen from Finland
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from France

seen from Germany

seen from Germany
seen from Germany
seen from Germany
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States

seen from United States
the thing about being a scholar of scifi studies (the degree im inventing and forcing my uni to give me lol) is that you develop Very Strong Feelings about the work of doug vakoch
"The Altered Shall Inherit the Earth: Biopower and the Disabled Body in Texhnolyze"
Now appearing in SFS #134: Nolan Boyd notes in "The Altered Shall Inherit the Earth: Biopower and the Disabled Body in Texhnolyze" that the anime series Texhnolyze (2003) is set in the underground city of Lux, where the human body’s ability to heal and repair itself has degraded. Those who wield power and can afford it have their amputated limbs replaced with advanced robotic prosthetics in a process known as texhnolyzation. The disabled body is many things in this world: a marker of class, a political cause, the locus of religious zealotry, and the symbol of humanity’s decline. The disabled body within this text is deeply enmeshed in biopolitical systems that organize power. By examining the flow of power throughout the series among the three leading groups in the city, the medical and scientific discourse surrounding texhnolyzation, and the violent actions of the Class, the city’s elite, Boyd traces the operation of different forms of biopower and examine the series’ relation to the disabled body and to the prosthetic technology of texhnolyzation. He argues that Texhnolyze resists ableist cultural and medical narratives as he examines how it engages with problematic representations of posthuman ideologies.