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dc.contributor.advisorRen, Hai
dc.contributor.authorHou, Dongchen
dc.creatorHou, Dongchen
dc.date.accessioned2018-05-21T23:30:51Z
dc.date.available2018-05-21T23:30:51Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10150/627737
dc.description.abstractThis dissertation examines the significance of human bodies in the interaction with technologies in writing. Instead of treating writing as linguistic signifiers, this work conceptualizes writing as visual traces imbued with rich information on writers’ embodied experience and bodily dynamic with the external environment. A dialectical relationship in writing—writing as embodied experience and writing as technics—undergirds the overall discussion. On the one hand, writing delivers writers’ embodied experience including bodily locomotion, sensuous feeling, and embodied creativity; on the other hand, writing’s embodiment is influenced and formulated by technics, the external prostheses that mediate embodied sensuousness. Grounded in this dialectical relationship in writing, this dissertation examines four cases—stenography, typewriter, calligraphy robots, and artificial writing—to demonstrate the interactive trajectory between external prostheses and embodied writing subjects, as well as its enmeshment with specific socio-political and historical desires, power relations, and discourses. Chinese writing, due to its traditional emphasis on embodied traces in writing, exemplifies the tensions between the two. Under the overarching dialectical relationship between embodiment and technics, this work specifically looks at labor and authorship production in each modality of writing. The development of writing technologies triggers the changes of writers’ embodied experience due to the interrelatedness of the interior and prosthetic. The expressive hand, traditionally seen as the origin of creativity and subjectivity, has been deskilled. Authorship derived from the hand has shifted thereafter. Writing technologies’ encroaching into writing subjects’ embodied domain simultaneously evidences the transition from the “human” to the “posthuman,” the latter of which illustrates the equation of human with “information-processing machines” (Hayles 2008). After looking at human-technology encounters happening in writing, I find that the deskilling of the hand interestingly anticipates the reskilling of writing subjects. When the expressive hand is deskilled, writing subjects engage with the labor in embodied experience—the holistic collectiveness and dissolution of the intellectual/artistic labor and reproductive labor—and contribute to authorship production in different modalities of writing. This research engages intellectual conversations with works that challenge the deep-seated hierarchy between speech and writing, and a series of derivative distinctions between mind and body, and Episteme (knowledge) and Techne (craft, art, technology) by focusing on the embodied experience in writing. It articulates how the body becomes a site to perceive the dynamics between human subjects and machines, relinking the chain of authorship production from tangibility to abstraction.en_US
dc.language.isoen_USen_US
dc.publisherThe University of Arizona.en_US
dc.rightsCopyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author.en_US
dc.subjectAuthorship productionen_US
dc.subjectChinese writingen_US
dc.subjectEmbodied experienceen_US
dc.subjectLaboren_US
dc.subjectTechnologyen_US
dc.titleBodies in (E)motion: Decoding Chinese Writing in the Interplay between Embodied Experience and Technicsen_US
dc.typetexten_US
dc.typeElectronic Dissertationen_US
thesis.degree.grantorUniversity of Arizonaen_US
thesis.degree.leveldoctoralen_US
dc.contributor.committeememberDiao, Wenhao
dc.contributor.committeememberLanza, Fabio
dc.contributor.committeememberGramling, David
dc.description.releaseRelease after 04-May-2019en_US
thesis.degree.disciplineGraduate Collegeen_US
thesis.degree.disciplineEast Asian Studiesen_US
thesis.degree.namePh.D.en_US


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