Feeling Real, Feeling Free: the Body, Bio-Politics and the Spectacle in Blade Runner 2019 and 2049
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Date
2023
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
The Netherlands Press
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
No
OpenAIRE Downloads
OpenAIRE Views
Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
This paper sets Scott’s original film Blade Runner (1982) and Villeneuve’s Blade Runner 2049 (2017) in a ‘disjunctive synthesis’ in order to provide critical analyses of both films with respect to some complex configurations of the body along two axes: bio-politics and the spectacle. We offer a reading of these configurations by focusing on the relationships between the human (organic), the non-human (android) and the immaterial (holographic); the eye (optics), the hand (haptics), and aesthetics; slavery, instrumental labour and free-play; the politics of bodies and of memories; the potentialities of revolution and the transmission of ‘tradition of the oppressed’. In this, we foreground two seemingly marginal characters – J. F. Sebastian and Ana Stelline. These ‘little people’ embody and inhabit the convolutions of Blade Runner’s ‘more human than human’ world through ‘free use’ of the body and playfulness which, superficially innocent, nevertheless bear within them the promise of radical political change. © 2023, The Netherlands Press. All rights reserved.
Description
Keywords
Bio-politics, Blade runner, Fiction, Impotentiality, Spectacle, 791, 300
Fields of Science
0301 basic medicine, 0303 health sciences, 03 medical and health sciences
Citation
WoS Q
Scopus Q
Q2

OpenCitations Citation Count
N/A
Source
Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture
Volume
7
Issue
1
Start Page
1
End Page
13
Collections
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Mendeley Readers : 1
Page Views
13
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