Abstract
In recent scholarly works on automata, a major topic of discussion has been the man-machine, or the idea of considering a human being in mechanical terms.1 The notion has been deployed in the various fields of biology and physiology, in the use of the machine analogy in the description of the body; in psychology and sociology, in the elucidation of individual as well as mass behavior; and in philosophy, in the understanding of the mind in relation to, as well as reaction against, the concept of machinery. The man-machine has, in fact, been a central idea with which Western culture has pondered the nature of humanity.But what of the woman-machine? When we speak of the man-machine, is the word 'man' used merely as a...