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A Thing About Machines: Eça de Queirós's Technological Twilight Zone
Author(s) -
Ana Ilievska
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of lusophone studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.1
H-Index - 2
ISSN - 2469-4800
DOI - 10.21471/jls.v4i2.245
Subject(s) - anthropocentrism , humanity , modernity , twilight , sociology , aesthetics , conversation , citizenship , power (physics) , epistemology , environmental ethics , communication , philosophy , political science , law , physics , quantum mechanics , astronomy , politics
By reconstructing the acts and voices of technological artifacts in A cidade e as serras (1901), this paper outlines what I call Eca de Queiros’s technological “twilight zone,” where machines are granted literary citizenship, and human interlocutors are forced to reevaluate who and what counts as humanity and conversation. I argue that the unresponsiveness of technological artifacts to the human voice in A cidade e as serras reveals a process of destabilization of power hierarchies and vocal anthropocentrism. Eca neither demonizes nor glorifies machines; rather he elaborates ways in which productive coexistence and communication can remain a prime objective. In A cidade e as serras, Eca parses out anxieties about technology and modernity in subtle and balanced ways that can shed new light on enduring questions about humanmachine interactions in our era of technological dependence.

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