Hayles political move is to replace the self-enclosed human envisioned by Enlightenment liberal individualism with a vision of a material-informational entity whose boundaries undergo continuous construction and reconstruction (1999, 3) within contemporary regimes of computation. She is well known for her research and understanding of the terms "human" and "posthuman" as concepts emerging from our historical . Society for Literature, Science and the Arts. Chaos and Order: Complex Dynamics in Literature and Science. saving. Nancy Katherine Hayles (born December 16, 1943) is an American postmodern literary critic, most notable for her contribution to the fields of literature and science, electronic literature, and American literature. For Hayles, the effects of our technogenetic relationships are neither necessarily oppressive or liberatory, but what they do require is that the humanities should and must be centrally involved in analysing, interpreting, and understanding the implications. 1999, 338 pages, 5 line drawings "[4][5] Hayles has taught at UCLA, University of Iowa, University of MissouriRolla, the California Institute of Technology, and Dartmouth College. the post-World War II Macy Conferences on cybernetics), cultural studies (e.g. The result of this reframing of thinking and cognition relocates the human as one among many players in an extended, flexible, and self-organizing cognitive system. You are the cyborg, and the cyborg is you. Clear rating. Distinguished Guest Professor, Uppsala University, 2018-2022, Distinguished Research Professor of English, University of California, Los Angeles 2017-present, James B. Duke Professor of Literature Emerita, Professor of Literature and Director of Graduate Studies, Literature Program, Duke University, 2008-2014, John Charles Hillis Professor of Literature University of California, Los Angeles 2002-2008, Distinguished Professor of English, University of California, Los Angeles, 2003-2008, Distinguished Professor, Design/Media Arts, University of California, Los Angeles, 2003-2008, Professor of English, University of California, Los Angeles, 1992-2003, Professor of English, University of Iowa, 1990-92, Associate Professor of English, University of Iowa, 1985-1989, Visiting Associate Professor of Literature, Caltech, Fall 1988, Assistant Professor of English, University of Missouri-Rolla, 1982-85, Visiting Associate, California Institute of Technology, 1979-80, Assistant Professor of English, Dartmouth College, 1976-82, Chemical Research Consultant, Beckman Instrument Company, 1968-70, Research Chemist, Xerox Corporation, 1966, Literature, Science and Technology of the 20th and 21st Century, Modern and Postmodern American and British Fiction, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Elected 2015, Hurst Distinguished Professor, Washington University, October 16-19, 2018, Luesebrink Career Achievement Award, Electronic Literature Organization, 2018, Critical Inquiry Professor, University of Chicago, April-May 2015, Holmes Seminar Professor, University of Kansas, June 2014, Lifetime Achievement Award, Society for Literature, Science and the Arts, 2013, Fellowship, Institute for Advanced Studies, University of Durham U.K., 2014-2015, Pilgrim Lifetime Achievement Award, Science Fiction Research Associates, 2012, Digital Publishing Grant, $10,000, Franklin Humanities Institute, Duke University, GreaterThanGames Humanities Laboratory, Co-Director, $225,000 grant for 2011-2014, Honorary Doctorate, Art College of Design, Pasadena CA 2010, Inductee, Innovation Hall of Fame, Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester NY, 2010, Honorary Doctorate, Umea University, Sweden, 2007, Presidential Research Fellowship, University of California, 2006-7, ASC Fellowship, National Humanities Center, 2006, Fulbright Senior Specialist, Moscow University, 2005.
n katherine hayles hypercognition