33 research outputs found

    Bionic bodies, posthuman violence and the disembodied criminal subject

    Get PDF
    This article examines how the so-called disembodied criminal subject is given structure and form through the law of homicide and assault. By analysing how the body is materialised through the criminal law’s enactment of death and injury, this article suggests that the biological positioning of these harms of violence as uncontroversial, natural, and universal conditions of being ‘human’ cannot fully appreciate what makes violence wrongful for us, as embodied entities. Absent a theory of the body, and a consideration of corporeality, the criminal law risks marginalising, or altogether eliding, experiences of violence that do not align with its paradigmatic vision of what bodies can and must do when suffering its effects. Here I consider how the bionic body disrupts the criminal law’s understanding of human violence by being a body that is both organic and inorganic, and capable of experiencing and performing violence in unexpected ways. I propose that a criminal law that is more receptive to the changing, technologically mediated conditions of human existence would be one that takes the corporeal dimensions of violence more seriously and, as an extension of this, adopts an embodied, embedded, and relational understanding of human vulnerability to violence

    The University Library in the Twenty-First Century

    Get PDF
    published or submitted for publicatio

    Group Processes and Intergroup Relations

    No full text

    The New Television Technologies

    No full text

    Group processes and intergroup relations

    No full text
    256 p. : il.; 22 cm

    Group processes : review of personality and social psychology

    No full text
    294 p.; 23 cm

    Group Processes and Intergroup Relations

    No full text

    Group processes

    No full text
    corecore