Sex, robots & vegan meat : adventures at the frontier of birth, food, sex & death / Jenny Kleeman.
Material type: TextPublisher: London : Picador, 2020Copyright date: ©2020Description: 357 pages ; 24 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 150989490X
- 9781509894901
- 1509894888
- 9781509894888
- Sex, robots and vegan meat
- 303.483 23
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | City Campus City Campus Main Collection | 303.483 KLE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | A550173B |
Includes bibliographical references.
Part 1: The future of sex -- 'Where the magic happens' -- 'The illusion of companionship' -- 'It won't feel a thing' -- 'All our relationships are at stake' -- Part 2: The future of food -- Cowschwitz -- The vegans who love meat -- Fish out of water -- Aftertaste -- Part 3: The future of birth -- The business of baby-carrying -- The biobag -- Immaculate gestation -- 'Finally. Women made obsolete' -- Part 4: The future of death -- DIY death -- 'The Elon Musk of suicide' -- 'The means to an end.'
"What if we could have babies without having to bear children, eat meat without killing animals, have the perfect sexual relationship without compromise or choose the time of our painless death? To find out, Jenny Kleeman has interviewed a sex robot, eaten a priceless lab-grown chicken nugget, watched foetuses growing in plastic bags and attended members-only meetings where people learn how to kill themselves. Many of the people Kleeman has met say they are finding solutions to problems that have always defined and constricted humankind. But what truly motivates them? What kind of person devotes their life to building a death machine? What kind of customer is desperate to buy an artificially intelligent sex doll and why? Who is campaigning against these advances, and how are they trying to stop them? And what about the many unintended consequences such inventions will inevitably unleash? Sex Robots and Vegan Meat is not science fiction. Its not about what might happen one day - its about what is happening right now, and who is making it happen. In the end, it asks a simple question: are we about to change what it means to be human for ever?" -- Publisher
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