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declaration of (brain) death and then turning off the machine. To pay for the life support is also
seen as the family members' manifestation of gratitude towards their (older) relatives and future
ancestors.
2. Anime
We have seen that although the situation has been changing lately, a general distrust towards
the notion of brain death and transplantations in general is still prevalent. However, probably
everybody who has ever seen some anime, i.e. Japanese animated movies or series that are
extremely popular both inside and outside of the country, knows that deformations and
reformations of space and human or humanoid bodies in particular are very common themes.
These can be connected to some Western scholars as well. Donna Haraway in her famous
‘Cyborg Manifesto’ from 1985 describes three dichotomies typical for our Western type of
thinking which, according to her, it is now high time to abandon: human/animal, organism/
machine, physical/nonphysical. (Haraway 2016) Many anime cross all of these three boundaries.
The human/animal can be seen in the internationally renowned work of the director Miyazaki
Hayao, but for me, the other two boundaries are more interesting. The famous anime Ghost in
the Shell (Oshii 1995) is about a state employee, the cyborg Major Kusanagi whose only organic
part is a small piece of a brain and she therefore longs for exploring a mysterious identity with
which she feels to have a lot in common. The entity is not only entirely artificial (i.e. without any
organic part), but most importantly, it originated in virtual space (so it does not have a fixed
material identity) and came into existence solely on its own. In one of the scenes, the major,
inspired by the questions the cyberspace entity provoked, talks about her own personality and
the problem of identity in general:
“We can quit but we'd have to give back our cyborg parts and augmented brains to the
government. All components that make me up as an individual. There are countless ingredients that
make up the human body and mind. A face and voice to distinguish oneself from others, the hand
you see when you wake up, your childhood memories and feelings about your future. And that's not
all. There's also the ability to access vast amounts of information from an infinite network ... All of
that blends to create a mixture that forms me, and gives rise to my conscience.”
In the screenshot (Figure 1), there is
Kusanagi trying to get access to the
cyber entity. Her body is falling apart,
which she does not care about and
probably also does not feel. After that,
she managed to merge with the cyber
entity and with cyberspace.
Figure 1
8
Critical Issues in Science, Technology and Society Studies
Conference Proceedings of the 17th STS Conference Graz 2018
- Title
- Critical Issues in Science, Technology and Society Studies
- Subtitle
- Conference Proceedings of the 17th STS Conference Graz 2018
- Editor
- Technische Universität Graz
- Publisher
- Verlag der Technischen Universität Graz
- Location
- Graz
- Date
- 2018
- Language
- English
- License
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-85125-625-3
- Size
- 21.6 x 27.9 cm
- Pages
- 214
- Keywords
- Kritik, TU, Graz, TU Graz, Technologie, Wissenschaft
- Categories
- International
- Tagungsbände
- Technik