APRIL 17, 2017
FREUD TOLD US that one of the most unsettling effects for human ontology is to be confronted by a machine that comes to life. In this, he was but echoing what was already a century-long anxiety about the limits and definitions of the human since the beginning of the machine age. Rupert Sanderss new film Ghost in the Shell, based on the 1995 cult classic anime of the same name by Mamoru Oshii, based on the manga by Shirow Masamune, and following a long line of cinematic cyber-fiction from Blade Runner to Ex Machina, extends this apprehension about the animation of the inanimate and asks all of the expected (and, dare I say, tired) questions: What makes a human human? Is consciousness the same as the soul? Is there a ghost in the machine? Is artificial intelligence an enhancement or an erasure of the human? What happens to the human element when the brain gets reduced to a series of electrical impulses, and, conversely, along a more sentimental line, can machines have feelings, too?
Raising these questions has become a convention of the cyber-fiction genre; so, too, has the deployment of femininity and racial otherness as gratuitous and exotic titillation. Reviews of Sanderss film have already noted the voyeuristic pleasures afforded by a naked Scarlett Johansson, who plays Major Motoko Kusanagi, an augmented cybernetic cop who is not shy about exposing her wholly synthetic body. Many have chided the movie for its appropriative uses of Asiatic things and persons as exotic decor, and all seem to agree that the casting of Johansson as Kusanagi was a form of commercial whitewashing, if not downright whiteface. But a film like Ghost in the Shell should raise questions for us about the relationship between surface and embodiment, especially what that relationship really entails for raced and gendered subjects.
Ghost in the Shell, along with the genre of cyberpunk with its techno-Orientalism, itself a reboot of 19th-century Orientalism, gives us the opportunity to consider an alternative logic of American racial embodiment. Dichotomies like authenticity versus artificiality, interiority versus surface, ghost versus shell, organic humanness versus synthetic assemblage simply do not help us address the uncanny materialization of race and gender. The peculiar thing about Asiatic femininity in the Western racial imagination is that it has never needed the biological or the natural to achieve a full, sensorial, agile, and vivid presence:
The conflation of Asiatic femininity and artificiality reaches from Plato through Oscar Wilde and can be seen in Art Nouveau, French Symbolism, all the way up to wide-ranging versions in the 21st century. Asiatic femininity has always been prosthetic. The dream of the yellow woman subsumes a dream about the inorganic. She is an (if not the) original cyborg.
It is easy to mourn the loss of humanity in a figure like this or, conversely, to celebrate its triumphant posthumanism, but it is much harder and, I would argue, much more urgent to dwell with the discomfort of undeniable human alterity, a figure who does not let us forget that the human has always been embroiled with the inhuman well before the threat of the modern machine. In this light, racial logic as this strange embodiment-that-is-also-not-enfleshment haunts Ghost in the Shell, playing itself out compulsively on the surfaces of the film: in the flickering holograms of the mise-en-scne, on the hygienic surfaces of the Frankensteinian lab, and on the skin of our heroine. It is not a coincidence that the most visually arresting and most philosophically suggestive element in the film is the Majors epidermis: an arresting combination of resilient matter and willful transparency; seamed yet seamless; a unified collation of fragmented and variegated nudes; a bareness that is also armor. The Majors supra-human and sartorial skin exemplifies pure impenetrable technology, but it also carries the unseen, porous, and fractured history of human labor, by which I do not mean the delicate hands of her scientist-surgeon creator but the laboring race-body underlying the slave logic of the cyborg. Thus the very surface of Johansson/Majors white, inorganic, impeccable, and implacable skin, precisely as cladding, enacts, counterintuitively, a deep dive into Asiatic femininity. She is the 21st-century technological shell encasing the traumatic kernel of Euro-American imperialism and racial history. (Let us not forget that the Major is the product/daughter of an American industrial giant heralding high-tech progress in a corporate conglomerate-state called Japan.)
If one of the global inhuman humans that emerged out of Western imperial history was the Chinese coolie (a male laboring body mythologized as infinitely capable of enduring pain, mechanical, an ideal laborer), and if one of the other inhuman human figures arising out of the 19th century was the Oriental woman (a female, decorative, disposable toy for leisure), then we can think of the Major as the merging of both: a body of labor and numb endurance, but also a smooth beauty that bears the lines of its own wreckage, a delicacy that is also impermeable and insensate. Throughout most of the film, the protagonist played by Johansson is simply named the Major; Sanders suppresses for most of the film the original anime characters full (and explicitly Japanese) name. This may abet the whitewashing, but it also has the opposite effect of punching up the big reveal at the end the disclosure that Majors white body has been playing host to Kusanagis Japanese brain by fulfilling a racial logic that has been implicit all along.
In the original anime series, the most chilling philosophic proposition is not that machines and cyborgs can be hijacked but that human consciousness can be hacked. In Sanderss film version, the pathos of the human as vulnerable-yet-mechanical is augmented by precisely the spectral evocation of Asiatic femininity, the imaginary engine that switches between the thingness of persons and the personness of things. The film may tell a cautionary tale about how people have been turned into things; consider this memorable line spoken to our cyborg heroine: They did not save your life; they stole it. But the history of Orientalism in the West is not just a history of objectification but also a history of personification: the making of personness out of things. This Non-Person, normally seen as outside of modernity and opposite to organic human individualism, actually embodies a forgotten genealogy about the coming together of life and nonlife, labor and style, which conditions the modern conceit of humanness.
As the scientists in Ghost in the Shell keep telling us, the Major is the great hope, the success story, the Eve for the future. Repeatedly touted as unique, though we discover the opposite, the Major stands as a singularity that is serial: a shell born out of many other shells. When the Major looks into the face of a geisha-robot-assassin in a barely disguised mirror scene, her comrade Batou (Pilou Asbk) is quick to assure her of a distinction, You are not like that. But we suspect that what is being disavowed here is precisely the complex and messy interpenetrations of race, gender, and machine. Being a cyborg and a hybrid being, the Major is exactly like the robot: Asiatic, other, alien. And this condition of otherness is, paradoxically, the alibi for, and the residue of, her humanity. Race and femininity are the supplements that enable this toggle between the human and the inhuman to emerge.
We have arrived at a double-edged sword: racial and gender differences entail a history of profound dehumanization; at the same time, they have also provided the most powerful and affective agents for humanizing the dreams of synthetic inventions.
What is inside the machine? The yellow woman: the ghost within the ghost. The biographical revelation at the end of Ghost in the Shell is but a literalization of this insight. This is also why the Asiatic woman can play double roles: simultaneously atavistic (the geisha, the slave girl) and futuristic (the automaton, the cyborg). The artificiality of Asiatic femininity is the ancient dream that feeds the machine in the heart of modernity.
Anne Anlin Cheng is professor of English and director of American Studies at Princeton University.She is the author ofThe Melancholy of Race: Psychoanalysis, Assimilation, and Hidden GriefandSecond Skin: Josephine Baker and the Modern Surface.
Read the original post:
The Ghost in the Ghost - lareviewofbooks
- 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]
- Manifestly Haraway - Brooklyn Rail [Last Updated On: March 1st, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 1st, 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]
- 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]