Built Women in Men’s Paradises: A Critical Analysis of the Garden of Eden Narrative and Alex Garland’s Ex Machina

IF 0.1 0 RELIGION
C. Chapman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract:Bringing the biblical story of the Garden of Eden (Genesis 2-3) into conversation with Alex Garland’s 2014 film Ex Machina, this paper examines and compares the malescribed nature of paradise stories that describe the “building” of woman-creatures. From ancient Judean scribes to modern film-makers and computer coders, male-guarded forms of literacy enabled and continue to enable storytelling and world-building. A comparison of the accounts of the creation of Eve of the Garden with Ava of Ex Machina highlights that male control over literacy more generally and creation accounts more specifically yields diminished woman-creatures designed to serve the specific needs of men in male-imagined paradise settings. Although separated by millennia, ancient Judean scribes and modern computer programmers have imagined and built woman-creatures with a limited set of functions and programmed routines that include providing help, serving as a companion, and heterosexual receptivity.
男性范式中的女性构建——伊甸园叙事与加兰德的《前玛奇娜》的批判性分析
摘要:本文将《圣经》中的伊甸园故事(《创世纪》2-3)与亚历克斯·加兰德2014年的电影《前Machina》进行了对话,考察并比较了描述女性生物“建筑”的天堂故事的男性化性质。从古代犹太抄写员到现代电影制作人和计算机程序员,男性保护的识字形式使讲故事和建设世界成为可能,并将继续成为可能。将《花园之夜》的创作与《前Machina的Ava》的创作进行比较,突显出男性对识字的控制更为普遍,而创作的描述更为具体,产生了被削弱的女性生物,旨在满足男性想象中的天堂环境中男性的特定需求。尽管相隔数千年,但古代犹太抄写员和现代计算机程序员一直在想象和构建具有有限功能和程序的女性生物,包括提供帮助、充当伴侣和异性恋接受能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Religion and Popular Culture
Journal of Religion and Popular Culture Arts and Humanities-Religious Studies
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
27
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