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To browse Academia. Scott Rogers. Emilie Dionne. Bronwen Calvert. This paper examines the connections between some key tropes of cyberpunk texts and the narrative of Dollhouse, including the exploration of the experience of embodiment and the relationship between body and mind.
Robert Cheatham. Asko Kauppinen. Jennifer Linton. An analysis and discussion of the various sources that served as inspiration for my visual art installation entitled The Disobedient Dollhouse. These sources include the literary fiction of the 19th-century Gothic novelists, gothic horror films, the Surrealists, and the grotesquery of Victorian art.
Holly Randell-Moon. Television and film writer Joss Whedon has produced a number of popular culture works which explore representations of what female bodies are seen to be capable of and how these representations affect what female bodies can do. Texts such as Buffy the Vampire Slayer — , Serenity , and Dollhouse — are as much celebrated for subverting gender and genre conventions as they are criticized for reinforcing sexualized images of women and violence.
Instead of approaching Whedon's texts in terms of their representations of gender, and how feminist or otherwise these representations are, this paper explores the ways in which Whedon's texts suggest that subjectivity is textually and discursively constructed. In particular, I will stage a reading of his latest television program, Dollhouse, as a representation of the somatechnical construction of bodies and identity.
Somatechnics refers to the inextricable connection between the soma, the material corporeality of bodies, and the techne or techniques and technologies through which bodily being is produced and lived. By making visible the somatechnics of bodily being and the ways gender and embodiment are experienced through and produced by cultural and discursive technologies, Dollhouse emphasizes the role of power in the construction of embodied identity rather than something which always or inevitably oppresses and constrains bodies gendered as female.