The Trouble with Joi

Ryder, Mike (2019) The Trouble with Joi. In: Blade Runner 2049 and Philosophy. Popular Culture and Philosophy . Open Court, Chicago. ISBN 9780812694710

Full text not available from this repository.

Abstract

While the character Joi in Blade Runner 2049 may conform to certain negative stereotypes around gender and the role of women, things are far more complex than they first seem. This is because she is not a human being at all, but rather an AI. So, not only is she acting out the role of a woman – much as Judith Butler describes in her famous work Gender Trouble – but she is also acting out the role of a human being as well. In this case, we cannot separate Joi’s gender from her assumed ‘humanity’. This is because she cannot be ‘female’ without first being recognised as human, and her ‘human-like’ identity requires that she be thought of in gendered terms. It is not then, so much a question of whether Joi is female or even human, but rather how we define the human in the first place, and what her performance reveals about the unstable terms on which our own humanity is defined. In this chapter, I explore various elements of Joi’s performance, both as a ‘woman’, and as a ‘human being’. This includes looking both at how Joi operates within the film world, and how her character extends into the real world beyond. As I conclude, the ‘trouble with Joi’ is not so much her gender, but the way she blurs the line between the human and the machine, suggesting that we are perhaps just as much like Joi, as she is like us.

Item Type:
Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings
Subjects:
?? BLADE RUNNERBLADE RUNNER 2049AIIDENTITYGENDERSUBJECTIVITYJOIPHILOSOPHY ??
ID Code:
135732
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
29 Jul 2019 08:35
Refereed?:
No
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
12 Sep 2023 02:44