![]() ![]() The robotic imaginary: The human and price of dehumanized labor. ![]() Klara and the Sun: Do androids dream of human emotions? The Christian Science Monitor on March 1. Love and sex with robots: The evolution of human-robot relationships. The managed heart: Commercialization of human feeling. Fires on the border: The passionate politics of labor organizing on the Mexican frontera. ![]() Multitude: War and democracy in the age of empire. Theatre, science fiction, and care robots: Embodying contemporary experiences of care. Journal of Asia-Pacific Pop Culture, 4(1), 42–58.Įagleton, T. Becoming caregivers: Companion robots and instructions for use. Kazuo Ishiguro interview: We can fly too close to the Sun. It argues that as a companion robot, Klara’s affective labor makes her more humanlike, and that in the posthuman world where artificial intelligence can be ever more potent and inescapably change the human relations, the key to more constructive relationship is to cherish hope and show benevolent love to one another, whether they are humans, or non-humans.Īppleyard, B. By focusing on the Artificial Friend Klara’s complex emotions, such as her sensitivity, pathos and altruistic love, which is in strong contrast to the possessive, overprotective, and self-centered love of Josie’s mother, this essay uses Michael Hardt’s concept of affective labor to ponder on the question of parental love and human and non-human relationship. If super AI becomes possible, what could be the relationship between humans and non-humans? Does love play an important role in it? What is the meaning of true love? Noted for writing “novels of great emotional force”, Kazuo Ishiguro in his most recent speculative fiction Klara and the Sun imagines a posthuman world in which enhanced transhumans, super AIs and ordinary human beings coexist and interact with each other. ![]()
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