
Prostheticity, Disability, and Spaceflight
Author(s) -
Martin Boucher
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
con texte
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2561-4770
DOI - 10.28984/ct.v2i1.270
Subject(s) - posthuman , posthumanism , disability studies , reflexivity , transhumanism , mediation , subject (documents) , sociology , human enhancement , epistemology , psychology , philosophy , computer science , gender studies , social science , library science
In this short work, the author will reflect on how we might understand the technology-subject relationship in a way that equally captures the position of the individual with a disability and that of the interplanetary astronaut. The works of Tamar Sharon in mediated posthumanism and Dan Goodley in critical disability studies will be consulted. This cursory exploration will conclude that both the astronaut and the individual with a disability are congruent posthuman subjects insofar as their relationship to technology challenges the idea of a transhumanist overcoming of human limits. Exploring this relationship can tell us something about how posthuman subjects may be understood more generally.
Critical Disability Studies, Mediated Posthumanism, Mediation, Reflexivity, Originary Prostheticity, Tamar Sharon, Dan Goodley