Image for The Smart Wife: Why Siri, Alexa, and Other Smart Home Devices Need a Feminist Reboot

The Smart Wife: Why Siri, Alexa, and Other Smart Home Devices Need a Feminist Reboot

Part of the The MIT Press series
See all formats and editions

Meet the Smart Wife--at your service, an eclectic collection of feminized AI, robotic, and smart devices.

This digital assistant is friendly and sometimes flirty, docile and efficient, occasionally glitchy but perpetually available.

She might go by Siri, or Alexa, or inhabit Google Home.

She can keep us company, order groceries, vacuum the floor, turn out the lights.

A Japanese digital voice assistant--a virtual anime hologram named Hikari Azuma--sends her "master" helpful messages during the day; an American sexbot named Roxxxy takes on other kinds of household chores.

In The Smart Wife, Yolande Strengers and Jenny Kennedy examine the emergence of digital devices that carry out "wifework"--domestic responsibilities that have traditionally fallen to (human) wives.

They show that the principal prototype for these virtual helpers--designed in male-dominated industries--is the 1950s housewife: white, middle class, heteronormative, and nurturing, with a spick-and-span home.

It's time, they say, to give the Smart Wife a reboot.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£40.00
Product Details
The MIT Press
0262360039 / 9780262360036
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
01/09/2020
English
320 pages
152 x 229 mm
Copy: 10%; print: 10%