30/01/2025

Film Studies Research Seminar Series of King’s College London

Susana Viegas is presenting at the Film Studies Research Seminar Series at the Department of Film Studies of King's College London: "Do Androids Die? Exploring the Life and Death of Technological Beings".

Abstract This talk investigates a growing field of study: posthuman thanato-film analysis, situated at the intersection of philosophies of death, film, and technology. Moving beyond conventional depictions of death and dying in cinema, this interdisciplinary approach examines how films contemplate mortality and finitude through the lens of artificial beings such as androids and humanoid robots. While death traditionally pertains only to living organisms, the “death” of androids introduces alternative semantic frameworks, including deactivation, decommissioning, or disconnection. This presentation explores the connection between technology and mortality, focusing on narratives where humanoid robots confront their finite existence and grapple with artificial death, thereby blurring the boundaries between humans and intelligent machines. I analyse Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner and the HBO television series Westworld, co-created by Lisa Joy and Jonathan Nolan. Both the replicants in Blade Runner and the hosts in Westworld challenge the human perception of death and dying, while themselves embody divergent temporal understandings of life and mortality. Notably, androids do not experience biological death in a chronological sense. Yet, their existence and imagined consciousness prompt questions about their capacity to comprehend finite temporality and engage with concepts like mortality. These explorations shed light on the intricate relationship between artificial intelligence and human consciousness, offering profound insights into the nature of life, death, and what lies between.

Chair Catherine Wheatley

February 5, 5-7PM, Bush House SE 2.10

📸 Blade Runner [1982], by Ridley Scott

Film and Death
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18/07/2025

The Film-Phil Lisbon Seminars: Davide Sisto

The next session of our Film-Phil Lisbon Seminars will be led by Davide Sisto (University of Turin), who will talk about “Thanabots. Digital immortality between sci-fi movies and reality”. Abstract This talk intends to focus on the topic of so-called digital immortality. In particular, it intends to analyze the birth and development of a particular […]
15/07/2025

Book Discussion: Queer Post-Cinema, by Astrid Deuber-Mankowsky

On September 25, 2025, a discussion will take place about the book Queer Post-Cinema: Reinventing Resistance (ICI Berlin Press 2025), by Astrid Deuber-Mankowsky. The discussion will be held in English, in the auditorium A2 of NOVA FCSH (Campus Av. de Berna) and will feature the author, Susana Viegas and Iracema Dulley. About the book: The […]
06/01/2025

CfP Special Issue on Swan Songs: Philosophical Reflections on Death, Time, and Memory in Testament Films

Swan Songs: Philosophical Reflections on Death, Time, and Memory in Testament Films Dedicated to the last films of renowned filmmakers, often referred to as “testament films” or “swan songs,” this Special Issue will examine their thematic, narrative, and stylistic elements, viewing these final works as profound summations of their creators’ careers and philosophical syntheses of […]
11/08/2025

Response to “Death, Disappearance, and Digitality: Existential Meditations on Cinema, Anime and Media”, by Corey P. Cribb

This publication proceeds from a talk given by Corey P. Cribb (Technological University Dublin) at Discovering/Uncovering: The NECS 2025 Conference, Lusófona University, June 19, 2025 (NECS) The goal of my talk today is to situate presentations by Susana Viegas (“Wandering Toward the End: Existentialism and Death in Gerry”), Lucas Ferraço Nassif (“Into the Wired: Lain […]
11/08/2025

New article by Marco Grosoli on Apichatpong’s Cemetery of Splendour (2015)

A new article by our post-doctoral researcher Marco Grosoli is now out, published in Cinergie‘s latest issue, edited by Massimo Fusillo and Mirko Lino. Cinergie is an open-access, peer-reviewed, class-A journal and the full issue is available here. In his paper, titled “The Political Asleep: Non-Traumatic Spectrality in Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s Cemetery of Splendour”, Marco Grosoli […]
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Funded by the European Union (ERC, FILM AND DEATH, 101088956). Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Research Council Executive Agency. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.

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