
Ursula
.my-button { background-color: black; color: white; padding: 10px 20px; border: none; text-decoration: none; font-weight: regular; display: inline-block; text-align: center; } .my-button:hover { background-color: #333; } PURCHASE HERE Images by Hannah Whitaker Edited by Nicholas Muellner and Catherine Taylor Text by Dawn Chan and David Levine Hardcover, 7 x 10.5 in. / 98 pgs / 44 color. These beautiful, unsettling and playful photographs show how certain sci-fi tropes—from digital servants to sex robots—have been consistently gendered as female. The latest photobook from Brooklyn-based photographer Hannah Whitaker (born 1980) imagines the embodied forms of personified technology which have long been central to sci-fi narratives: digital servants, sex robots, machine-learning projects.Ursula addresses the consistency with which these figures are gendered as female, subservient and sexualized, and slyly points to our society's insidious