Donna J. Haraway Manifestly Haraway (University of Minnesota Press, 2016)
In 1983, the Socialist Review asked Donna Haraway to write a few pages about the tentative future of socialist feminism during the Reagan era. Two years later, she published A Manifesto for Cyborgs: Science, Technology, and Socialist Feminism in the 1980s, a difficult, rococo text that not only announced but luxuriated in the enmeshing between human and machine, the leakages between organic matter and artificial intelligence, the prosthetic extension of the subject and its diffusion into fractal assemblages. By the late 20th century, Haraway argued, we are all chimeras, theorized and fabricated hybrids of machine and organism; in short, we are cyborgs.
A creature of fact and fiction, Haraways cyborg describes the reality of accelerating technological mediation while also offering a political metaphor for social construction.From one perspective, writes Haraway, a cyborg world is about the final imposition of a grid of control on the planet, about the final abstraction embodied in a Star Wars apocalypse waged in the name of defense, about the final appropriation of womens bodies in a masculinist orgy of war. Dialectically, however, the cyborg could also prefigure lived social and bodily realities in which people are not afraid of their joint kinship with animals and machines, not afraid of permanently partial identities and contradictory standpoints. From this position, the cyborg offered a postmodernist, non-naturalist, and anti-essentialist politics to socialist feminisma politics disinterested in reproduction, organicism, or myths of origin, and at home with irony, creolization, and, as Haraway would likely put it today, queerness. A cyborg body, Haraway writes, is not innocent; it was not born in a garden; it does not seek unitary identity and so generate antagonistic dualisms without end. The bastard child of weaponized capitalism, the cyborg is also the potential agent of its collapse. Illegitimate offspring, Haraway reminds us, are often exceedingly unfaithful to their origins. Their fathers, after all, are inessential.
Widely known and published as the Cyborg Manifesto, the essay, which opens Manifestly Haraway, is regarded as a theoretical cult classic and a lodestar of posthumanism (though Haraway has distanced herself from that term). Its prose is opaque and heteroglossic, thick with conceptual agglutinations and perverse couplings. One could fault Haraways text for being a bit too infatuated with its own excesses, over-invested in taboo fusions, breached binaries, and other then-trendy pomo tropes. In 2001, the critic Suhail Malik said as much and more, dismissing Haraways cyborg theory as a self-serving sexying-up of critical liberalism via a vague optimism in which all transgressions of boundaries are welcomed. But this casual trivialization ignores the political crisis in which the Cyborg Manifesto was forged, one which is reverberating today.
In 1981, Ronald Reagan, a B-list entertainer dismissed by Republican lites as a lightweight, and ridiculed by liberals as the Candidate from Disneyland, won the presidency with an eerily familiar campaign slogan: Lets Make America Great Again. Buoyed by nostalgic appeals to white populism and the racialized scapegoat of the Welfare Queen, Reagan set into motion the aggressive entrenchment of free-market absolutism, a project that political economist William Davies has termed combative neoliberalism. The immediate political context of the Cyborg Manifesto was one of rising unemployment, cuts to social services, a war on labor, the redistribution of wealth from the working and middle classes to the rich, and a bellicose missile defense system nicknamed Star Wars.
Facing an onslaught of reactionary forces, the U.S. left was also buckling from internal fractures, crumbling consensuses, and foreshortened horizons. Haraway recalls this sense of closure in a conversation with Cary Wolfe in Manifestly Haraway: You could no longer not know that the 60s were well and truly over, and the great hopefulness of our politics and our imaginations needed to come to terms with the serious troubles within our own movements, within our larger historical moment. While socialist, anti-imperialist, environmental, black, womens, and LGBT liberation movements struggled to find common ground, discourses of personal empowerment began to eclipse solidarity, and a generation of radicals was absorbed into an academy in which postmodernism became the de rigueur philosophy of an increasingly abstract, centerless, financialized world. The title of Andre Gorzs 1982 book, Farewell to the Working Class, fitted the mood, Sharon Smith, author of Women and Socialism, wrote in the Spring 1994 issue of International Socialism. Having divorced the source of oppression from class society, and raised the notion of autonomy to a principle, it was only a short step from the politics of movementism to the politics of identity.
Semantic confusion and ideological splinting was felt not only between movements but also within them. It has become difficult to name ones feminism by a single adjectiveor even to insist in every circumstance upon the noun, Haraway observes in the Cyborg Manifesto.
Consciousness of exclusion through naming is acute. Identities seem contradictory, partial, and strategic. With the hard-won recognition of their social and historical constitution, gender, race and class cannot provide the basis for belief in essential unity. There is nothing about being female that naturally binds women. [] Painful fragmentation among feminists (not to mention among women) along every possible fault line has made the concept of woman elusive, an excuse for the matrix of womens dominations of each other.
In particular, Haraways cyborg feminism was motivated by the imperativestill pressing todayto address the [e]mbarrassed silence about race among white radical and socialist-feminists through universalizing myths of sororal unity. In demolishing the idea of woman as an undifferentiated block, the cyborg allowed for a pluralized concept of women with elastic and variable identities beyond being a source of alienated domestic labor or an object of sexual objectification. Rather than rooting politics in a hierarchy of oppressions, it articulated difference within solidarity. Instead of identification, vanguard parties, purity and mothering, it proposed synthetic, big-tent coalitions like Chela Sandovals notion of women of color, inhabited not by birthright but by elective affinity.
Though both are bound in the spiral dance, Id rather be a cyborg than a goddess, Haraway famously finished the manifesto, announcing a steely futurist alternative to the atavistic earth mother rhetoric of certain tendencies within 60s and 70s feminism. The cyborg was and remains a potent aesthetic and erotic cipher, conjuring horrors and fantasies of mechanic integration from carapaced bermenschenJacob Epsteins Rock Drill, Darth Vaderto the replicants of Blade Runner and the bionic concubines of Westworld. (Its hard to not see shades of Haraways cyborg Alice in Westworlds Dolores, herself modeled on Lewis Carrolls heroine.)
But the glamour of the cyborg as an image has somewhat overdetermined the manifestos reception, eclipsing its historical context, political stakes, and the larger scope of Haraways intellectual project that emerges through the other texts collected in Manifestly Haraway. For instance, those who know Haraway only through A Cyborg Manifesto and its memorable finale would be surprised to know that she has recently taken up a more-than-casual interest in primeval goddesses. In her published conversation with Wolfe, Haraway embraces Terra and Gaia as ecological metaphors (goddesses, she explains, are O.K. so long as theyre pre-Olympiad and non-matriarchal); and the book ends with The Chthulucene From Santa Cruz, a beautiful, apocalyptic text invoking snakey Gorgons called the chthonic ones.
In 2003s Companion Species Manifesto, Haraway transitioned from cyborgs to the more cuddly topic of canine companionship as a site of humannonhuman entanglement and relationality. I have come to see cyborgs as junior siblings in the much bigger, queer family of companion species, she wrote, abandoning the postmodern irony and cybernetic edge of A Cyborg Manifesto for a deeply earnest, affect-oriented discourse on the love and reciprocal possession between the author and her Australian shepherd. (Dog-impervious readers like myself might feel somewhat alienated by the purple language about pooper-scoopers and deep tongue doggy-kisses.) Persistent throughout Haraways writing, however, is an emphasis on the co-constitutive interpenetration of humans and their others (machines, animals, and the environment), an insistence that there is no becoming, there is only becoming-with. In her interview with Wolfe, Haraway corrects those who read this latter manifesto as something of a rebuke to her earlier, more famous one: There are folks who asked, Why did you drop your feminist, antiracist, and socialist critique in the Companion Species Manifesto? Well, its not dropped. Its at least as acute, but its produced very differently. She says, Theres a sense in which the Companion Species Manifesto grows more out of an act of love, and the Cyborg Manifesto grows more out of an act of rage.
Perhaps its this sense of anger that makes A Cyborg Manifesto the more urgent text, despite its vintage. It isnt difficult to read hieroglyphs of the present in Haraways panoramic description of the miniaturization of technology, the end of the white family wage, the assault on labor, the precarity and feminization of work, the increasingly fuzzy boundaries between work and play, the technological surrogacy and dispersion of the self (Our machines are disturbingly lively, and we ourselves frighteningly inert). In the months since the election of Donald Trump, who amplified Reagans folky appeal to white America with a more resentful and ferocious rhetoric of cultural revenge against political correctness, arguments about identity politics, a contentious and somewhat obfuscatory term, have become plethoric. The best of such arguments, such as Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylors No Time For Despair, have called for a heterogeneous and inclusive resistance movement without apologizing for the compromised political agenda of the neoliberal Democratic establishment. The worstsee Mark Lillas notorious New York Times op-ed, The End of Identity Liberalismhave insinuated that liberals should stop making such a big fuss over diversity issues like racism and transphobia in order to romance white working-class voters. As Naomi Klein has pointed out, nothing has done more to liberate our lites to build their corporate dystopia than the persistent and systemic pitting of working-class whites against blacks and immigrants, men against women. White supremacy and misogyny are and always have been our elites most potent defenses against a genuine left populist agenda and meaningful democracy. In the fight ahead, its ethically and politically imperative to resist playing a crude, zero-sum game between identity politics and economic populismas if social and economic oppressions werent, as Haraway might put it, deeply braided or, as we might say now following the mainstreaming of Kimberl Crenshaws insights, intersectional. From the perspective of cyborgs, Haraway writes, freed of the need to ground politics in our privileged position of the oppression that incorporates all other dominations, the innocence of the merely violated, the ground of those closer to nature, we can see powerful possibilities. Underneath the cyborgs armor, theres a radical, situated, socialist feminism for these reactionary times.
Original post:
Manifestly Haraway - Brooklyn Rail
- Calls for contributions to journals and books - ESSE [Last Updated On: March 24th, 2016] [Originally Added On: March 24th, 2016]
- Posthumanism, technology and immortality - bethinking.org [Last Updated On: March 24th, 2016] [Originally Added On: March 24th, 2016]
- Posthumanism [Last Updated On: March 27th, 2016] [Originally Added On: March 27th, 2016]
- Posthumanism: A Christian Response | The Curator [Last Updated On: June 12th, 2016] [Originally Added On: June 12th, 2016]
- Critical Posthumanism Network [Last Updated On: June 12th, 2016] [Originally Added On: June 12th, 2016]
- Beyond Humanism: Reflections on Trans- and Posthumanism [Last Updated On: June 12th, 2016] [Originally Added On: June 12th, 2016]
- Deconstruction and Excision in Philosophical Posthumanism [Last Updated On: June 13th, 2016] [Originally Added On: June 13th, 2016]
- What is Posthumanism? | The Curator [Last Updated On: June 15th, 2016] [Originally Added On: June 15th, 2016]
- What is Posthumanism? | The Curator [Last Updated On: June 16th, 2016] [Originally Added On: June 16th, 2016]
- Robert Brandom and Posthumanism - enemyindustry.net [Last Updated On: June 21st, 2016] [Originally Added On: June 21st, 2016]
- What Is Posthumanism? University of Minnesota Press [Last Updated On: June 24th, 2016] [Originally Added On: June 24th, 2016]
- Humanism, Transhumanism and Posthumanism [Last Updated On: July 3rd, 2016] [Originally Added On: July 3rd, 2016]
- Posthumanism: A Critical Analysis: Stefan Herbrechter ... [Last Updated On: July 23rd, 2016] [Originally Added On: July 23rd, 2016]
- Wiley: Posthumanism - Pramod K. Nayar [Last Updated On: July 29th, 2016] [Originally Added On: July 29th, 2016]
- Denis Dutton on Bad Writing [Last Updated On: December 7th, 2016] [Originally Added On: December 7th, 2016]
- Talk utilizes postmodern approaches to explore images of the medieval body - NIU Today [Last Updated On: February 23rd, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 23rd, 2017]
- Acknowledgment is Not Enough: Coming to Terms With Lovecraft's ... - lareviewofbooks [Last Updated On: March 5th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 5th, 2017]
- Most westerners distrust robots but what if they free us for a better life? - The Guardian [Last Updated On: March 29th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 29th, 2017]
- And even more 3/24/2017 - ReporterNews.com [Last Updated On: March 29th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 29th, 2017]
- 'Just who do you think you are? Holloway asks in annual Maston Lectures - Baptist Standard [Last Updated On: March 31st, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 31st, 2017]
- Tidbits 3/27/2017 - ReporterNews.com [Last Updated On: April 2nd, 2017] [Originally Added On: April 2nd, 2017]
- Darwin, Marx, and Freud: The Genealogy of "Posthumanism ... [Last Updated On: April 3rd, 2017] [Originally Added On: April 3rd, 2017]
- Screen/Print #52: Sheila Sheikh Searches for New Political Vocabularies in 'And Now: Architecture Against a ... - Archinect [Last Updated On: April 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: April 7th, 2017]
- Screen/Print #52: Shela Sheikh Searches for New Political Vocabularies in 'And Now: Architecture Against a Developer ... - Archinect [Last Updated On: April 10th, 2017] [Originally Added On: April 10th, 2017]
- The Ghost in the Ghost - lareviewofbooks [Last Updated On: April 19th, 2017] [Originally Added On: April 19th, 2017]
- Epigenetic Television: The Penetrating Love of Orphan Black - lareviewofbooks [Last Updated On: June 9th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 9th, 2017]
- Human Geography Master's celebrates 25 years - University of Bristol [Last Updated On: June 25th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 25th, 2017]
- Posthumanism | Literature in a Wired World Wiki | Fandom ... [Last Updated On: June 29th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 29th, 2017]
- Super Sad True Love Story - Wikipedia [Last Updated On: July 3rd, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 3rd, 2017]
- Gabriel S De Anda | Writer [Last Updated On: July 5th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 5th, 2017]
- Cyborg anthropology - Wikipedia [Last Updated On: July 12th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 12th, 2017]
- Harry T Dyer - The Conversation UK [Last Updated On: August 11th, 2017] [Originally Added On: August 11th, 2017]
- Critical Posthumanism Critical Posthumanism Network [Last Updated On: November 20th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 20th, 2019]
- Posthumanism Theory - Technical Communication Body of ... [Last Updated On: November 20th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 20th, 2019]
- Robots and Ethics in the Digital Age ML Con Keynote Livestream - JAXenter [Last Updated On: December 13th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 13th, 2019]
- Cosmodeism: Prologue to a Theology of Transhumanism - Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies [Last Updated On: March 31st, 2020] [Originally Added On: March 31st, 2020]
- 10 Web Design and UX Trends to drive better conversion rate - TechGenyz [Last Updated On: April 9th, 2020] [Originally Added On: April 9th, 2020]
- Everything, All At Once, Through the Eyes of WangShui - Interview [Last Updated On: December 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: December 19th, 2020]
- Posthumanist Confinement : Big Tech's 'Societies of Control' | Economic and Political Weekly - Economic and Political Weekly [Last Updated On: March 21st, 2021] [Originally Added On: March 21st, 2021]
- The Art Academy of Latvia is opening the application process for POST a new specialization of master's programme in art | Press Releases - leta.lv [Last Updated On: April 11th, 2021] [Originally Added On: April 11th, 2021]
- Artist Phoebe Beasley Reflects on Life and MIGRATIONS - SF Weekly [Last Updated On: April 11th, 2021] [Originally Added On: April 11th, 2021]
- Between dystopia and utopia, Kazuo Ishiguro's 'Klara and the Sun' is about being human - The Tribune [Last Updated On: April 23rd, 2021] [Originally Added On: April 23rd, 2021]
- Stonefly review - a bug's life with all its grind and glory - Eurogamer.net [Last Updated On: June 4th, 2021] [Originally Added On: June 4th, 2021]
- From the Periphery: Alternative Futures and Speculative Storytelling - MutualArt.com [Last Updated On: June 20th, 2021] [Originally Added On: June 20th, 2021]
- New Materialism(s) Critical Posthumanism Network [Last Updated On: June 27th, 2021] [Originally Added On: June 27th, 2021]
- Jreg Wiki | Fandom [Last Updated On: July 23rd, 2021] [Originally Added On: July 23rd, 2021]
- Questions of the Humanities and its 'Value' - The Wire [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2021] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2021]
- WM | whitehot magazine of contemporary art | Density Betrays Us at The Hole - whitehotmagazine.com [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2021] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2021]
- University of Huddersfield presents 10 projects that respond to unfamiliar cultural contexts - Dezeen [Last Updated On: July 29th, 2021] [Originally Added On: July 29th, 2021]
- Adam Jasper on Olafur Eliasson at the Fondation Beyeler - Artforum [Last Updated On: September 2nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: September 2nd, 2021]
- Peak Performances will be as adventurous as ever in its 2021-22 season - njarts.net [Last Updated On: September 2nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: September 2nd, 2021]
- Culture Night 2021: 21 events to catch on Friday, right around Ireland - The Irish Times [Last Updated On: September 16th, 2021] [Originally Added On: September 16th, 2021]
- Radical Austria: Everything is Architecture - Announcements - E-Flux [Last Updated On: September 16th, 2021] [Originally Added On: September 16th, 2021]
- Using transdisciplinary approaches to find solutions to wicked problems - Times of Malta [Last Updated On: October 5th, 2021] [Originally Added On: October 5th, 2021]
- Iris van Herpen - Wikipedia [Last Updated On: October 17th, 2021] [Originally Added On: October 17th, 2021]
- What is Posthumanism, and Why Should You Care ... [Last Updated On: December 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: December 9th, 2021]
- Panel 1: Critical Posthumanism and Italian Cinema and ... [Last Updated On: December 19th, 2021] [Originally Added On: December 19th, 2021]
- Book on Alzheimers published by UoH faculty - The Hans India [Last Updated On: December 22nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: December 22nd, 2021]
- ICAS 22 Conference - Posthumanism and the Anthropocene | H ... [Last Updated On: December 22nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: December 22nd, 2021]
- Cardinal Mller: Demanding abortion as a human right is unsurpassable in its cynicism - Catholic World Report [Last Updated On: April 11th, 2022] [Originally Added On: April 11th, 2022]
- Tony Vinci's apocalypse course takes students beyond the end of the world to find... - Ohio University [Last Updated On: April 11th, 2022] [Originally Added On: April 11th, 2022]
- 'The Milk of Dreams' Tests a Theory of the Posthuman - frieze.com [Last Updated On: April 27th, 2022] [Originally Added On: April 27th, 2022]
- What Is Left Of Being Human? On the Anthropology of Trans- and Posthumanism - Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies [Last Updated On: April 27th, 2022] [Originally Added On: April 27th, 2022]
- Galleries round-up: Wildlife artists bring nature to life...and the magic of Morris - Yahoo News UK [Last Updated On: May 7th, 2022] [Originally Added On: May 7th, 2022]
- Top 20 NJ Arts Events of the Week: Crawfish Fest, Coldplay, 'Three Sisters,' 'Grease,' more - njarts.net [Last Updated On: June 7th, 2022] [Originally Added On: June 7th, 2022]
- Why Artists Are Returning to 'Oceanic Thinking' - ArtReview [Last Updated On: June 24th, 2022] [Originally Added On: June 24th, 2022]
- More than just mushrooms: fungi class expands students worldview | The ... [Last Updated On: June 29th, 2022] [Originally Added On: June 29th, 2022]
- Open call: 2022 International Residency - Announcements - e-flux [Last Updated On: June 29th, 2022] [Originally Added On: June 29th, 2022]
- The Liberal Arts in the Age of Illiberalism - The Wire [Last Updated On: August 25th, 2022] [Originally Added On: August 25th, 2022]
- Thirty-four faculty members to receive awards this fall | The University Record - The University Record [Last Updated On: October 6th, 2022] [Originally Added On: October 6th, 2022]
- Posthumanism: A Philosophy for the 21st Century? - TheCollector [Last Updated On: November 27th, 2022] [Originally Added On: November 27th, 2022]
- 5 anime adaptations to celebrate the release of 'Knights of the Zodiac - New England Center for Investigative Reporting [Last Updated On: April 29th, 2023] [Originally Added On: April 29th, 2023]
- Global History Helps Us to Understand How Colonization Shaped ... - The Daily | Case Western Reserve University [Last Updated On: April 29th, 2023] [Originally Added On: April 29th, 2023]
- International literary conference explores the 'ecologies of childhood' - The UCSB Current [Last Updated On: August 8th, 2023] [Originally Added On: August 8th, 2023]
- 11 Best Cyberpunk Movies You Should Watch Right Now - The Quirer [Last Updated On: September 3rd, 2023] [Originally Added On: September 3rd, 2023]
- Anthropocene research among Brock projects to receive $965000 in ... - Brock University [Last Updated On: September 3rd, 2023] [Originally Added On: September 3rd, 2023]
- Conference addresses transgression and taboo - Times of Malta [Last Updated On: September 29th, 2023] [Originally Added On: September 29th, 2023]
- Are the posthumans here yet? - Big Think [Last Updated On: April 12th, 2024] [Originally Added On: April 12th, 2024]