Robotics, Affective Displacement, and the Automation of Care

Recent accounts of labor displacement highlight the automation of tasks in care work, long thought to require uniquely human skills. These developments call for a retheorization of displacement that addresses the shifting sites and relations of human labor, while also questioning the humanness of ca...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAnnals of the American Association of Geographers Vol. 112; no. 3; pp. 684 - 691
Main Authors Lynch, Casey R., Bissell, David, House-Peters, Lily A., Del Casino, Vincent J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Washington Routledge 22.03.2022
Taylor & Francis Ltd
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Summary:Recent accounts of labor displacement highlight the automation of tasks in care work, long thought to require uniquely human skills. These developments call for a retheorization of displacement that addresses the shifting sites and relations of human labor, while also questioning the humanness of care. This intervention supplements a humanist concern for the displacement of discrete human bodies with a posthuman concern for the displacement of specific affective relations. The emerging robotic care industry illustrates how displacement involves complex reconfigurations of more-than-human intimacy. Developing a micropolitical understanding of technological displacement, we argue that caring as a sensory set of affective relations is being transformed by new regimes of robotic care, and this has crucial implications for theorizations of care, automation, and displacement in geography.
ISSN:2469-4452
2469-4460
DOI:10.1080/24694452.2021.1985953