Hello, and welcome to Overthink.
The podcast where your two favorite cyborgs talk about philosophy and everyday life.
I'm Ellie Anderson.
And I'm David Pena Guzman.
As always, for an extended version of this episode and other additional content,
check out our Substack.
David, today we're doing a Closer Look episode on Donna Haraway's essay, The Cyborg Manifesto.
This is an essay that was published in 1985 and it is a landmark in post-humanist theory,
feminist theory, post-humanist feminist theory.
I feel like it's been...
I mean, let's be real.
It's been a trendy essay among the grad students for a number of decades now.
I feel like my students are still talking about it.
They really wanted to read it this past semester.
And then I was like, I couldn't fit it into the syllabus.
So let's talk about it on Overthink.
But it was very much, you know,
something that students were discussing a lot when we were in grad school in the 2010s as well.
The text has had a lot of staying power,
largely because it's both outlining a really interesting critique of some of the dominant discourse that people in these fields have traditionally relied on for engaging in the task of social critique,