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oapen-20.500.12657-59862
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oapen-20.500.12657-598622024-03-27T14:14:50Z Menschmaschinen / Maschinenmenschen in der Literatur Brötz, Dunja AI; Comparative Literature thema EDItEUR::D Biography, Literature and Literary studies thema EDItEUR::D Biography, Literature and Literary studies::DS Literature: history and criticism::DSB Literary studies: general thema EDItEUR::U Computing and Information Technology::UY Computer science::UYZ Human–computer interaction Artificially created (living) beings that are neither human nor machine, neither man nor woman, neither organism nor dead material, have occupied our imagination for thousands of years. For example, Aristotle complained in his main work Politics (4th century BC) that there were (still) no human-like machines that could take over the tasks of slaves and thus revolutionize social life. The world of science fiction and fantasy literature is also teeming with homunculi, golems, robots, androids and cyborgs. In the course "Human machines / machine people in literature. Golems, robots, androids and cyborgs as the third sex" held by Dunja Brötz at the Leopold-Franzens-University Innsbruck in the winter semesters 2020/21 and 2021/22, many of these literary figures were examined by students of the master's program "Comparative Literature" from a discourse-analytical and gender-theoretical perspective. This anthology summarizes some of these innovative analyses, whose chronological arc spans from antiquity to the present and throws literary highlights on human machines and machine people in texts by Ovid, E.T.A. Hoffmann, Gustav Meyrink, Marge Piercy, Andreas Eschbach, Walter Moers, Angelika Meier, Ian McEwan, Kazuo Ishiguro, Martina Clavadetscher and Raphaela Edelbauer. 2022-12-06T12:58:52Z 2022-12-06T12:58:52Z 2023 book https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/59862 ger application/pdf n/a 10.15203-99106-087-1.pdf https://www.uibk.ac.at/iup/buecher/9783991060871.html innsbruck university press 10.15203/99106-087-1 10.15203/99106-087-1 7e4aa047-ebd5-4269-b6c8-a86925324b93 225 Innsbruck open access
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OAPEN
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DSpace
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German
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Artificially created (living) beings that are neither human nor machine, neither man nor woman, neither organism nor dead material, have occupied our imagination for thousands of years. For example, Aristotle complained in his main work Politics (4th century BC) that there were (still) no human-like machines that could take over the tasks of slaves and thus revolutionize social life. The world of science fiction and fantasy literature is also teeming with homunculi, golems, robots, androids and cyborgs. In the course "Human machines / machine people in literature. Golems, robots, androids and cyborgs as the third sex" held by Dunja Brötz at the Leopold-Franzens-University Innsbruck in the winter semesters 2020/21 and 2021/22, many of these literary figures were examined by students of the master's program "Comparative Literature" from a discourse-analytical and gender-theoretical perspective. This anthology summarizes some of these innovative analyses, whose chronological arc spans from antiquity to the present and throws literary highlights on human machines and machine people in texts by Ovid, E.T.A. Hoffmann, Gustav Meyrink, Marge Piercy, Andreas Eschbach, Walter Moers, Angelika Meier, Ian McEwan, Kazuo Ishiguro, Martina Clavadetscher and Raphaela Edelbauer.
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| title |
10.15203-99106-087-1.pdf
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| spellingShingle |
10.15203-99106-087-1.pdf
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10.15203-99106-087-1.pdf
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| title_full |
10.15203-99106-087-1.pdf
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| title_fullStr |
10.15203-99106-087-1.pdf
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| title_full_unstemmed |
10.15203-99106-087-1.pdf
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| title_sort |
10.15203-99106-087-1.pdf
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| publisher |
innsbruck university press
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| publishDate |
2022
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| url |
https://www.uibk.ac.at/iup/buecher/9783991060871.html
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1799945197959774208
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