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The curse of Frankenstein: visions of technology and society in the debate over new reproductive technologies

Research output: Working paper

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The curse of Frankenstein: visions of technology and society in the debate over new reproductive technologies. / Bloomfield, B P; Vurdubakis, T.
Lancaster University: The Department of Organisation, Work and Technology, 2003. (Organisation, Work and Technology Working Paper Series).

Research output: Working paper

Harvard

Bloomfield, BP & Vurdubakis, T 2003 'The curse of Frankenstein: visions of technology and society in the debate over new reproductive technologies' Organisation, Work and Technology Working Paper Series, The Department of Organisation, Work and Technology, Lancaster University.

APA

Bloomfield, B. P., & Vurdubakis, T. (2003). The curse of Frankenstein: visions of technology and society in the debate over new reproductive technologies. (Organisation, Work and Technology Working Paper Series). The Department of Organisation, Work and Technology.

Vancouver

Bloomfield BP, Vurdubakis T. The curse of Frankenstein: visions of technology and society in the debate over new reproductive technologies. Lancaster University: The Department of Organisation, Work and Technology. 2003. (Organisation, Work and Technology Working Paper Series).

Author

Bloomfield, B P ; Vurdubakis, T. / The curse of Frankenstein: visions of technology and society in the debate over new reproductive technologies. Lancaster University : The Department of Organisation, Work and Technology, 2003. (Organisation, Work and Technology Working Paper Series).

Bibtex

@techreport{98bf797375ef4cc68663560e10d9f7bd,
title = "The curse of Frankenstein: visions of technology and society in the debate over new reproductive technologies",
abstract = "At each successive moment in their development new reproductive technologies have provided the occasion for virulent argument about the role of technology in human affairs. And more generally, technoscientific knowledge has long been held both in awe and suspicion, with the latter acting as a kind of counterbalance to the continuing cultural investment in the image of scientific knowledge as empowerment, as the motive force of beneficial change. Given this cultural ambivalence the paper focuses on media representations of cloning and the 'designer baby' (with the latter enveloping a debate that has run for almost a decade now) and explores the ways utopian images of a world rendered ever more amenable to human desires have been closely shadowed by just as compelling dystopian visions which are nevertheless constructed from the same cultural material. Figures of occidental folklore such as Frankenstein (or Jeckyll or Brave New World), thus function as something of a convenient shorthand for articulating unease with the direction and pace of technological development, or even voicing loss of confidence in the modernist technoscientific project of instrumental control. In these circumstances, the chimeric notions of the 'designer baby' or the human 'clone' appear Janus-faced, concurrently representing the powers of human creativity as well as the monstrous progeny of an excessive epistemophilia. They are in this sense potent metaphors for the biotechnological revolution's declared power to re-shape both nature and society - for 'good' or 'ill'.",
author = "Bloomfield, {B P} and T Vurdubakis",
year = "2003",
language = "English",
series = "Organisation, Work and Technology Working Paper Series",
publisher = "The Department of Organisation, Work and Technology",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "The Department of Organisation, Work and Technology",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - The curse of Frankenstein: visions of technology and society in the debate over new reproductive technologies

AU - Bloomfield, B P

AU - Vurdubakis, T

PY - 2003

Y1 - 2003

N2 - At each successive moment in their development new reproductive technologies have provided the occasion for virulent argument about the role of technology in human affairs. And more generally, technoscientific knowledge has long been held both in awe and suspicion, with the latter acting as a kind of counterbalance to the continuing cultural investment in the image of scientific knowledge as empowerment, as the motive force of beneficial change. Given this cultural ambivalence the paper focuses on media representations of cloning and the 'designer baby' (with the latter enveloping a debate that has run for almost a decade now) and explores the ways utopian images of a world rendered ever more amenable to human desires have been closely shadowed by just as compelling dystopian visions which are nevertheless constructed from the same cultural material. Figures of occidental folklore such as Frankenstein (or Jeckyll or Brave New World), thus function as something of a convenient shorthand for articulating unease with the direction and pace of technological development, or even voicing loss of confidence in the modernist technoscientific project of instrumental control. In these circumstances, the chimeric notions of the 'designer baby' or the human 'clone' appear Janus-faced, concurrently representing the powers of human creativity as well as the monstrous progeny of an excessive epistemophilia. They are in this sense potent metaphors for the biotechnological revolution's declared power to re-shape both nature and society - for 'good' or 'ill'.

AB - At each successive moment in their development new reproductive technologies have provided the occasion for virulent argument about the role of technology in human affairs. And more generally, technoscientific knowledge has long been held both in awe and suspicion, with the latter acting as a kind of counterbalance to the continuing cultural investment in the image of scientific knowledge as empowerment, as the motive force of beneficial change. Given this cultural ambivalence the paper focuses on media representations of cloning and the 'designer baby' (with the latter enveloping a debate that has run for almost a decade now) and explores the ways utopian images of a world rendered ever more amenable to human desires have been closely shadowed by just as compelling dystopian visions which are nevertheless constructed from the same cultural material. Figures of occidental folklore such as Frankenstein (or Jeckyll or Brave New World), thus function as something of a convenient shorthand for articulating unease with the direction and pace of technological development, or even voicing loss of confidence in the modernist technoscientific project of instrumental control. In these circumstances, the chimeric notions of the 'designer baby' or the human 'clone' appear Janus-faced, concurrently representing the powers of human creativity as well as the monstrous progeny of an excessive epistemophilia. They are in this sense potent metaphors for the biotechnological revolution's declared power to re-shape both nature and society - for 'good' or 'ill'.

M3 - Working paper

T3 - Organisation, Work and Technology Working Paper Series

BT - The curse of Frankenstein: visions of technology and society in the debate over new reproductive technologies

PB - The Department of Organisation, Work and Technology

CY - Lancaster University

ER -