Female Coded Artificial Beings In Selected American Science Fiction Films, 1960s-2000s
Özet
This thesis is an analysis of depictions of “female coded” (being assigned gender traits
even in the absence of a biological sex) artificial beings in Norman Taurog’s Dr.
Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine (1965), Duncan Gibbins’ Eve of Destruction (1991),
Bryan Forbes’ The Stepford Wives (1975), Frank Oz’s The Stepford Wives (2004), Alex
Garland’s Ex Machina (2014) and Spike Jonze’s Her (2013) and what they represent
within the scope of science fiction. This thesis will focus on the concept of the artificial
being as a metaphor for the human condition, bodily autonomy, and human progress. It
will analyze how the depictions of male-coded artificial beings function as universal
commentary about humankind in general while female coded artificial beings represent
manifestations of specific ideas about women. Through these examples, this study will
argue that the portrayal of female coded artificial beings is a product of the male gaze
and the idealized place of women in society according to patriarchal standards. The
visual portrayals, which include female signifiers and sexualized visual representations,
further promote the concept of “the perfect woman” as understood from the point of
view of the male gaze and the gendered objectification of female body in the
metaphorical and physical senses. It will further argue that such presentation of artificial
characters go against the purpose of transgressing the limitations of the human condition
and that this approach hinders their potential to exist outside the boundaries of human
structures and standards.