Skip down to main content

OxDEG – Sex Robots: The end of love

With Professor Kathleen Richardson
Recorded:
30 May 2022
Speakers:
With Professor Kathleen Richardson

This talk will explore the politics that underpins the merging of humans and machines through narratives of love, sex and relationship with robots and AI. Drawing on ideas developed in her forthcoming book, Sex Robots: The End of Love (due to be published in 2023), this talk will examine the academic and business frameworks that mix humans with property forms.

Kathleen Richardson is professor of ethics and culture of robots and AI at De Montfort University. She is director of WERAID (Women, Ethics, Robots, AI and Data) a new research group at DMU. She is author of An Anthropology of Robots and AI: Annihilation Anxiety and Machines (2015) and Challenging Sociality: An Anthropology of Attachment, Autism and Robots (2018). In addition to her academic work she is founder of the Campaign Against Porn Robots (formerly Sex) and supports feminist organisations campaigning for rights of women and girls.

Speaker

Kathleen Richardson

Professor Kathleen Richardson

De Montfort University

Privacy Overview
Oxford Internet Institute

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Strictly Necessary Cookies
  • moove_gdrp_popup -  a cookie that saves your preferences for cookie settings. Without this cookie, the screen offering you cookie options will appear on every page you visit.

This cookie remains on your computer for 365 days, but you can adjust your preferences at any time by clicking on the "Cookie settings" link in the website footer.

Please note that if you visit the Oxford University website, any cookies you accept there will appear on our site here too, this being a subdomain. To control them, you must change your cookie preferences on the main University website.

Google Analytics

This website uses Google Tags and Google Analytics to collect anonymised information such as the number of visitors to the site, and the most popular pages. Keeping these cookies enabled helps the OII improve our website.

Enabling this option will allow cookies from:

  • Google Analytics - tracking visits to the ox.ac.uk and oii.ox.ac.uk domains

These cookies will remain on your website for 365 days, but you can edit your cookie preferences at any time via the "Cookie Settings" button in the website footer.