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189880

(2018) Love and sex with robots, Dordrecht, Springer.

The next evolution

the constitutive human-doll relationship as companion species

Deborah Blizard

pp. 114-127

This work examines arguments postulated by sexologists, science and technology studies (STS) scholars, and similar fields to highlight the ways in which human-(erotic) doll relationships may move from taboo and into a realm where they may in fact be seen as the next step in human evolution. To do so, this work moves from privileging the human-human relationship to taking seriously the importance of the human-nonhuman-non sentient (NHNS) relationship as an equally important element in building the future and understanding the present (as well as admitting to the importance of the doll as an object of human affection). Here, against a backdrop of questioning what is love, I present two theories within STS: Companion Species and Actor Network Theory (ANT) to argue that NHNS things not only matter in the creation of human relationships, but examines how such relationships fill a gap in understanding how it is that humans may truly love their erotic dolls in a meaningful way that not only removes them from realm of taboo but views it as a reasonable, if unsettling, progression into a sociotechnical world in the twenty-first century and beyond.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-76369-9_9

Full citation:

Blizard, D. (2018)., The next evolution: the constitutive human-doll relationship as companion species, in A. D. Cheok & D. J. Levy (eds.), Love and sex with robots, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 114-127.

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