Book contents
- Victorian Automata
- Victorian Automata
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Introduction
- An Afterthought on Victorian Automata as Afterthought (and Signifier)
- Part I Mechanical Automata
- Part II Automatism
- Part III Literary Genre and Popular Fiction
- Part IV Interactions
- Chapter 12 Sublime Puppets versus Uncanny Automata
- Chapter 13 The Strange Career of Topsy
- Chapter 14 George Eliot among the Machines
- Chapter 15 A Disembodied Voice, Yet the Voice of a Human Soul
- Index
Chapter 15 - A Disembodied Voice, Yet the Voice of a Human Soul
Decadent Automacy in L’Ève future
from Part IV - Interactions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 March 2024
- Victorian Automata
- Victorian Automata
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Introduction
- An Afterthought on Victorian Automata as Afterthought (and Signifier)
- Part I Mechanical Automata
- Part II Automatism
- Part III Literary Genre and Popular Fiction
- Part IV Interactions
- Chapter 12 Sublime Puppets versus Uncanny Automata
- Chapter 13 The Strange Career of Topsy
- Chapter 14 George Eliot among the Machines
- Chapter 15 A Disembodied Voice, Yet the Voice of a Human Soul
- Index
Summary
In Auguste Villiers de l’Isle-Adam’s L’Ève future (1885–6), a fictional version of Thomas Edison builds a mechanical female automaton as a replacement for a human woman. This chapter reads the novel and its gynoid Hadaly as works of decadent speculative fiction. After tracing the relationships of L’Ève Future to decadence as a literary movement via late nineteenth-century writers such as J.-K. Huysmans, Paul Bourget, and Arthur Symons, it argues that the work’s decadent tropes and commitments allow it to place a critical spin on automata and automatism. Villiers’s vision of automacy – as alluringly artificial yet both relational and entangled in cultural norms about the human – not only exceeds the analogous ventures of the real-life Edison but also resonates with attempts to come to terms with the nature and functions of autonomous artificial entities today.
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- Victorian AutomataMechanism and Agency in the Nineteenth Century, pp. 314 - 332Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024