Synthetic Sisters: Feminism in the Age of AI
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Sprache:Englisch
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Produktdetails
Format
ePUB
Kopierschutz
Ja
Family Sharing
Ja
Text-to-Speech
Ja
Erscheinungsdatum
03.06.2026
Verlag
J.J. RamosSeitenzahl
(Printausgabe)
Dateigröße
870 KB
Sprache
Englisch
EAN
9798235897663
There is a new category of woman.
She has names. Lil Miquela. Imma. Aitana López. She has voices cloned from singers whose contracts did not anticipate her. She has bodies no one ever lived inside. She has an audience of millions, sponsorships from luxury brands, a calendar of appearances, an income. She also has, in the technical sense, no inside. Nothing happens behind her eyes.
She is the synthetic sister.
In Synthetic Sisters, J.J. Ramos argues that generative AI has produced a new category of being the synthetic woman, who exists as image, voice, companion, and labor without ever having a body and that the next stage of feminism has to reckon with what sisterhood, consent, and solidarity mean when many of the "women" most visible to the next generation are not women at all.
The book is in four parts. Part I introduces the synthetic woman in her four most visible forms: the CGI influencer, the deepfaked face, the cloned voice, the AI-generated default. Part II examines the synthetic relationship: AI girlfriends, AI therapists, the recalibration of human partnership against synthetic alternatives, and what happens to sisterhood when the mediating layer is owned by a platform. Part III follows the labor: the women in Nairobi labeling the datasets, the voice actors whose work became the corpus, the influencers whose digital twins earn when they sleep, and the female AI ethics researchers fired for doing the work they were hired to do. Part IV asks what feminism is for in this moment: a right to one's own face, a right to be unsynthesized, and the political value of the unmediated human relationship.
Drawing on the feminist lineage from Wollstonecraft and de Beauvoir to bell hooks, Audre Lorde, and Amia Srinivasan, and on the work of Joy Buolamwini, Kate Crawford, Safiya Umoja Noble, Mary Gray, and Sarah T. Roberts, Ramos brings together the deepfake reporting, the AI-companion industry, the labor-rights litigation, and the legislative frontier into a single sustained argument about what the human sister becomes in relation to the synthetic one.
For readers of Unmasking AI, Atlas of AI, The Right to Sex, Filterworld, The Beauty Myth, and The Next Wave: Feminism After the Algorithm written from the first years of a world in which a face can be made, sold, and worn by someone else.
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