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This book works to delineate some of the major routes by which science and art intersect. Structured according to the origin myths of the posthuman that continue to shape the idea of the human in our technological modernity, this volume gives space to narratives of alter-modernity that resonate with Ursula K. Le Guin’s call for a new kind of story which exposes the violence and exploitation driven by a sustained belief in human exceptionalism, anthropocentrism, and cultural superiority. In this context, the posthuman myths of multispecies flourishing given in this collection, which are situated across a range of historical times and locations, and media and modalities, are to be thought of as kernels of possible futures that can only be realized through collective endeavour.



 An interdisciplinary archive of generative methods of writing, fabulation, and world-making, the contributors to this volume examine various aspects of a new style of living demanded by a more-than-human world.

List of Figures

List of Contributors

Acknowledgments

Introduction: An Orientation

Grant Hamilton & Carolyn Lau

Section 1: ELIZA (1964-1966)

Chapter
1. Posthuman Bodies: Why They (Still) Matter

N. Katherine Hayles

Chapter
2. Quantum Machine Intelligence

Alessandra Di Pierro & Luca Viganņ

Chapter
3. Berty

Angela Su

Chapter
4. Simulation in the Post-reality Feedback Loop

Kenny K. N. Chow

Chapter
5. An Object Misplaced in Time

Jule Owen

Section 2: Anansi (1526)

Chapter
6. An Interview with Rosi Braidotti

Grant Hamilton, Carolyn Lau & Rosi Braidotti

Chapter
7. Technogenesis as White Mythology

Stephen Cave & Kanta Dihal

Chapter
8. The First Virs

Danbee Kim

Chapter
9. In the Lap of the Synth

Stephen Oram

Chapter
10. Utopianism in the Technological Age

Lizzie OShea

Section 3: R.U.Radius (1921)

Chapter
11. Raised by Robots: Imagining Posthuman Maternal Touch

Amelia DeFalco & Luna Dolezal

Chapter
12. Tender Bodies

Zheng Mahler

Chapter 13 Smartwatch

Jennifer L Rohn

Chapter
14. The Tablet Stroker, Redux

Christine Aicardi

Chapter
15. CHOM5KY vs CHOMSKY: A Reflection on Machines, Meanings, and
Metaphors

Sandra Rodriguez

Chapter
16. Biospheres

Ta-wei Chi

Section 4: Anansi, Reprised (1526)

Chapter
17. Storying Relations as Posthuman Ethics

Carolyn Lau

Chapter
18. The World After, Lost Eons

David Blandy

Chapter
19. Hello, World! Hello, Poetic Zombies!

Winnie Soon & Susan Scarlata

Chapter
20. Foreign Bodies

Pippa Goldschmidt

Chapter
21. Melanin Object

Ari Larissa Heinrich

Chapter
22. An Interview with Jes Fan

Ari Larissa Heinrich & Jes Fan

Section 5: Potnia Theron (6,000BC)

Chapter
23. Beyond Transcendence: From human to Human in Tchaikovsky's
Children Series

Sheryl Vint

Chapter
24. Scoby skin, Yellow soup

HSURAE

Chapter
25. Posthuman Spirituality

Francesco Ferrando & Debashish Banerji

Chapter
26. The Left-hand Click and the Left-hand Lay: Intersecting
Technology and Folk Belief in Posthuman Spirituality

Evelyn Wan

Chapter
27. Towards a Low-Trophic Theory in Feminist Posthumanities: Staying
with Environmental Violence, Ecological Grief, and the Trouble of Consumption


Cecilia Åsberg & Marietta Radomska

Bibliography

Index
Grant Hamilton is Associate Professor of English Literature at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He teaches and writes in the areas of literary theory, twentieth-century world literatures, African literature, and computational literary studies. He is the author of The London Object (2021), The World of Failing Machines (2016), and On Representation (2011). He is the co-editor of A Companion to Mia Couto (2016), and editor of Reading Marechera (2013).

Carolyn Lau teaches and researches on global speculative fictions, contemporary literature, and narrative futures in the Department of English at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. She is the author of Posthuman Subjectivity in the Novels of J.G. Ballard (2023).