Please join us for the
Annual Distinguished Lecture in Medical Humanities
"Disability and the Promise of Technology: Eugenics, Prosthetics, and AI in Japan and the United States"
by Professor of Anthropology Karen Nakamura (UC Berkeley)
May 13, 2019 | 4:00-6:30 p.m.
Humanities Gateway 1030
Technological utopianism and new eugenics exist at the core of much of the current research in the biomedical and engineering sciences around disability and aging in both Japan and the United States, and indeed is also reflected in social policy as well. There exist huge gulfs between how technologists, bioethicists, and disability activists imagine the emerging role of technologies and disability. Whereas the disability activism of the 1960s-2000s pushed the social model for changing the built and social environment, we are in a period where new futures exist where invalid fetuses are diagnosed, treated, or disposed of before birth; and existing disabled bodies and minds are given physical, neurological, and biochemical prosthetics to appear normate. The backdrop against positive futurities are societal fears and imagined dystopias of the disabled and/or augmented bodymind gone amok. How do we merge these crip futurities into visions of future societies?