Thanatopolitics and colonial logics in Blade Runner 2049

Thesis Eleven 166 (1):109-117 (2021)
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Abstract

This article critically engages with Denis Villeneuve’s Blade Runner 2049, focusing on the relationship between colonial logics and biological engineering that understands the natural world as property. First, it discusses the connections between the film and the shifting status of biopolitics becoming thanatopolitics, prompted by advances in synthetic biology. It argues that the film’s preoccupation with the reproductive capacity of its replicants retraces a racialized colonialism and reconfigured slavery, or the voluntary labour of the occupied – as normalized in synthetic biology and the ongoing processes of devaluing of some lives over others for socioeconomic reasons. Second, and relatedly, the film reveals how deeply the thanatopolitics of a biopolitical economy is rooted in an intensification of racialized and colonial logics. The film thus doubles as a medium in which to grasp the centrality of colonial and racial logics to the ongoing real subsumption of life by capital, and the ways in which it continues to shape the present.

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reprint Taşkale, Ali Rıza (2021) "Thanatopolitics and colonial logics in _Blade Runner 2049_". Thesis Eleven 166(1):109-117

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The souls of Black folk.W. E. B. Du Bois - 1987 - Oxford University Press.
Necropolitics.Achille Mbembe - 2008 - In Stephen Morton & Stephen Bygrave, Foucault in an age of terror: essays on biopolitics and the defence of society. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
Reading Westworld.Alex Goody & Antonia Mackay (eds.) - 2019 - Springer Verlag.

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