Abstract: Cyborg Manifesto at Donna Haraway explains the relationship between women and technology. The summary of "Robot Manifesto" criticizes Donna Haraway 's article "Robot Declaration" as an analysis of women and advanced technology in the post - modern world. Haraway uses a variety of illustrations to focus on the relationship between women and the world of technology science, challenges feminists and uses robotic metaphors to participate in politics transcending naturalism and essentialism. She also uses robot ideas to provide political strategies for different benefits of socialism and feminism.
From the late 1970s to the mid 1980s feminists such as Donna Haraway and Anne Balsamo began discussing postmoderns, semi-mechanics and feminism. Haraway (A Cyborg Manifesto) considers robots to be a transcendental possibility of gender role, but Balsamo (gender technology) is based on Foucault's sexual theory that the body of a woman in a non-material world I claim a robot as a metaphor. This means that the 1990s was the "robotic era". Because people began to realize that they are not like isolated individuals, they are like nodes on the network. In other words, Kunzru says "Robots are not how much silicon is under your skin, or how many prostheses are in your body," they I think that I think.
Descendants are almost the same as Donna Haraway's "Robot Declaration" "Robot". The concept of Haraway's robot is a satire of the concept of a traditional robot overturning the metaphor of a traditional robot and its existence challenges a remarkable line between humans and robots. Haraway's robot is "Post-Human" beta version in many respects. Because her robot theory encouraged this problem to be adopted as a critical theory. Haraway, after Hals, his workplace is an important discourse, mostly after human beings, insisting on liberal humanism of the 20th century - separating the mind from the body and depicting the body as a "shell" or a carrier of the mind - doing. Since then, information technology has caused the question of the human body, it became increasingly complicated, and entered the 21st century.
Donna Haraway rethinks the cultural significance of robots in our era. In her "Cyborgs Manifesto" she celebrates the robot as a possibility of liberation and even as an idealistic idea - a metaphor of flexible identity, infringement of the borders, and obsolescence of men and women. In Haraway's view, the robot represents an industrial machine excluding human beings. However, robots are integrated in humans, which eliminates the distinction previously thought to separate humans from technology. In fact, the boundary of the intersection distinguishes robots. With neither human nor artificial, in a combination of the two, the robot will resolve all duality and opposite. In the case of Haraway, the human-centered universe depends on duality. We fatally program each opponent as good / bad, positive / negative, male / female, genuine / artificial, analysis / emotion, nature / culture. Master / Slave These dualisms constitute our ideas and need to be replaced.