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Title Man-made women : the sexual politics of sex dolls and sex robots / Kathleen Richardson, Charlotta Odlind, editors
Published Cham, Switzerland : Palgrave Macmillan, [2023]
©2023

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Description 1 online resource (xiii, 199 pages) : illustrations
Series Social and cultural studies of robots and AI
Social and cultural studies of robots and AI.
Contents 1. Introduction: The end of sex robots - for the dignity of women and girls -- 2. Modern-day Pygmalions reproducing the patriarchy -- 3. Mapping the uses of sex dolls: pornographic content, doll brothels and the similarities with rape -- 4. Fetishism and the construction of male sexuality -- 5. Playthings and corpses - turning women into dead body objects -- 6. Patriarchal imaginaries beyond the human: sex robots, fetish, and fantasy in the domination and control of women -- 7. Paedophilia, child sex abuse dolls and the male sex right: challenging justifications for mens sexual access to children and child sexual abuse material -- 8. The voice of the sex robot: from peep-show bucket to willing victim the terrorism of womens speech -- 9. The end of sex robots: porn robots and representational technologies of women and girls -- Correction to: Man-made women -- Index
Summary This book presents a unique, feminist approach to sex dolls and sex robots, taking a critical look at the academic and business narratives that serve to rationalise them. As new forms of pornography (porn robots), this edited volume provides an urgent womens centred critique. The emergence of sex robots is situated within the wider context of the attack on womens rights and the relentless rise of techno-pornography. As an outgrowth of the industries of prostitution, pornography and child sex abuse, these objects offer new ways to dehumanise women and girls. While support for sex robots is positioned as progressive and emancipatory, the contributors in this volume argue they reduce women to consumable parts. They explore how law, the arts, ethics, economy, politics and culture are interconnected with harmful technological developments. Kathleen Richardson is Professor of Ethics and Culture of Robots and AI in the Faculty of Computing, Engineering and Media at De Montfort University. She is author of An Anthropology of Robots and AI: Annihilation Anxiety and Machines (2015) and Challenging Sociality? An Anthropology of Autism, Attachment and Robots (2018). In 2015 she launched the Campaign Against Porn Robots (formerly the Campaign Against Sex Robots) to draw attention to the ethical harms of normalising pornographic technologies of women and girls. Charlotta Odlind is a freelance writer, coach and womens rights campaigner based in Brussels, Belgium. She has a BA (Hons) in European Studies with French and Spanish and an MA in International Relations. She has worked on child protection issues at Save the Children Brussels and volunteered with VSO for a year, advising on advocacy and communications strategies in a womens rights NGO in Kano, Nigeria. Working at FEANTSA (European Federation of National Organisations Working with the Homeless), she was editor of Homeless in Europe magazine. She is Campaigns Manager at the Campaign Against Porn Robots
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (ProQuest Ebook Central, viewed December 6, 2023)
Subject Sex dolls -- Political aspects
Sex machines.
Sex machines
Form Electronic book
Author Richardson, Kathleen. editor.
Odlind, Charlotta. editor
ISBN 3031193814
9783031193811
Other Titles Sexual politics of sex dolls and sex robots