Abstract
Biotechnology, artificial intelligence and immersive virtuality have arrived, and with them, a fundamental reconsideration of humanity has become essential. This shifting terrain is explored in posthuman literature, particularly in speculative fiction and cyberpunk fiction, which extensively deals with ideas of transhumanism, artificial intelligence consciousness, cyborg identity, synthetic life, body modification, fluid identity, and techno-evolution. These portrayals do not promote a remarkable path to a utopia or dystopia, but explore how technological enhancement, disembodied subjectivity and hybrid bodies deconstruct the humanist lineage and establish new replica of life.
This study explores the extensive theoretical and imaginative landscape of the posthuman literature through the analysis of works that incorporate mind uploading, conscious transfer, and the development of human-machine symbiosis. These narratives question anthropocentrism and re-construct identity as contingent, distributed and modifiable. The figure of the cyborg, the sentient AI, and the digitized self function not as gimmicks but as philosophical probes into agency, ethics, and the fragility of consciousness. Drawing from the theories of Donna Haraway, N. Katherine Hayles, Rosi Braidotti, and others, the study constructs a layered analysis of how posthuman themes complicate questions of morality, embodiment, and autonomy. Through the fusion of narrative and theoretical frameworks, this analysis highlights how speculative fiction acts as a site for ethical speculation and ontological experimentation. Ultimately, the posthuman condition is proposed not as a destination but as a contested process in which becoming-other through technology is both a perilous and promising path toward redefining identity, agency, and existence itself.
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