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Work Mate Marry Love: How Machines Shape Our Human Destiny

Work Mate Marry Love: How Machines Shape Our Human Destiny

by Debora L. Spar

Farrar, Straus and Giroux ·2020 ·352 pages ·Social Sciences
Bottom of the Pile
Bottom of the Pile
I Index
16/99
Bottom of the Pile

18/99

Critics

Bottom of the Pile

14/99

Readers

n/a

Scholars

3/99

Rating

34/99

Volume

23/99

Rating

5/99

Volume

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About This Book

"A crucial guide to life before—and after—Tinder, IVF, and robots. What will happen to our notions of marriage and parenthood as reproductive technologies increasingly allow for newfangled ways of creating babies? What will happen to our understanding of gender as medical advances enable individuals to transition from one set of sexual characteristics to another, or to remain happily perched in between? What will happen to love and sex and romance as our relationships migrate from the real world to the Internet? Can people fall in love with robots? Will they? In short, what will happen to our most basic notions of humanity as we entangle our lives and emotions with the machines we have created? In Work Mate Marry Love, Harvard Business School professor and former Barnard College president Debora L. Spar offers an incisive and provocative account of how technology has transformed our intimate lives in the past, and how it will do so again in the future. Surveying the course of history, she shows how marriage as we understand it resulted from the rise of agriculture, and that the nuclear family emerged with the industrial revolution. In their day, the street light, the car, and later the pill all upended courtship and sex. Now, as we enter an era of artificial intelligence and robots, how will our deepest feelings and attachments evolve? In the past, the prevailing modes of production produced a world dominated by heterosexual, mostly-monogamous, two-parent families. In the future, however, these patterns are almost certain to be reshaped, creating entirely new norms for sex and romance, and for the construction of families and the raising of children. Steering clear of both techno-euphoria and alarmism, Spar offers a bold and inclusive vision of how our lives might be changed for the better."


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Reviews

"This is a humanizing and unique take on technology is a necessary addition to the genre; Spar's voice included with the history will keep readers engaged in what could otherwise be dry information."

Natalie Browning· Library Journal Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Readers will take comfort in this clear-eyed assessment of humanity's ability to adapt to technological change."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Spar spends the first half of the book looking backward, tracing how monogamy sprang from the plow, how the steam engine pried open a gender divide at work and home, and how the dishwasher set the stage for the second-wave feminist movement."

Amanda Hess· The New York Times Read review ↗ Maybe Someday

"Its chapters are thinly presented and poorly researched, ignoring decades of careful, detailed scholarship ..."

Annette Lapointe· The New York Journal of Books Read review ↗ Bottom of the Pile

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