Mediating Human-Technology Relationships: Explorations of Hybridity, Humanity and Embodiment in Doctor Who

  • Anne Cranny-Francis Macquarie University, Sydney

Abstract


The relationship between human beings and technology has been a regular concern of the television series, Doctor Who. Though its titular hero moves through space-time by means of advanced technology and he is by his own admission a technological genius and Doctor 'of everything really', the program nevertheless consistently maps the unease that attends the interaction of humans and the technology - whether through the human characters' horror at the abuse of technology and its power or through characters who incorporate this interaction.

The trope of the cyborg, the human-machine hybrid that articulates many contemporary fears (and desires) about the intrusion of technology on the 'human' is enacted and embodied in Doctor Who by the Daleks and the Cybermen - long-term enemies of the Doctor. In the recent new series (2005-2009) featuring Christopher Eccleston and David Tennant both Daleks and Cybermen have returned, to enact contemporary concerns about new technologies. This paper explores the recent Dalek double-episode, "Daleks in Manhattan" and "Evolution of the Daleks" (2007) for its representation of current human-technology relationships.

Author Biography

Anne Cranny-Francis, Macquarie University, Sydney
Dr. Anne Cranny-Francis is an academic at Macquarie University, Sydney. Best known for her feminist writing on textual politics, she has also written on film, literature, popular music, and television.
Published
05-Jun-2009
How to Cite
Cranny-Francis, Anne. 2009. “Mediating Human-Technology Relationships: Explorations of Hybridity, Humanity and Embodiment in Doctor Who”. FORUM: University of Edinburgh Postgraduate Journal of Culture & The Arts, no. 08 (June). https://doi.org/10.2218/forum.08.613.
Section
Guest Contributions