
doi: 10.4000/traces.2603
handle: 20.500.13089/lhss
Whatever technophobic tendencies are manifested by the writers of the symbolist era, their practice interrogates their relationship to technology in a way that constitutes the cultural basis of our own. Such is the case with Villiers’ Ève Future. Beyond their contextual relevance (about the reproduction of appearances and motion, or the impact of recording technologies), the technologies and their potentialities used by Villiers de L’Isle-Adam are conceptualized in a way that logically predicts our own modes of interaction with a global technological environment, be it artificial intelligence, interactivity, simulation, the notion of “post-human” and the cognitive, libidinal, or gender mutations associated to it. By reading Villiers’ text with the help of present-day theory, this paper hopes to show the continuity of a cultural logic that determines our relationship to technology.
feminism, Social Sciences, artificial creature, littérature et technique, Villiers de L’Isle-Adam, [SHS.LITT] Humanities and Social Sciences/Literature, posthumain, H, literature and technology, post-human, créature artificielle, féminisme
feminism, Social Sciences, artificial creature, littérature et technique, Villiers de L’Isle-Adam, [SHS.LITT] Humanities and Social Sciences/Literature, posthumain, H, literature and technology, post-human, créature artificielle, féminisme
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