Zhang Xinyi
International Journal of Language, Literature and Culture (IJLLC), Vol-5,Issue-4, July - August 2025, Pages 65-76, 10.22161/ijllc.5.4.10
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Article Info: Received: 03 Jul 2025, Received in revised form: 29 Jul 2025, Accepted: 04 Aug 2025, Available online: 08 Aug 2025
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Paolo Bacigalupi’s science fiction The Windup Girl critiques technocapitalist violence through genetically modified life forms—Cheshire Cats, Megodonts, and the Windup girl Emiko—whose suffering embodies the ethical collapse and demonstrating from three forms: cyborg terror, loss of life rights and technological alienation. The Cheshire Cat’s cyborg image shatters illusion and reality, creating a cognitive dissonance for humans struggling to survive in a post-apocalyptic world and disrupting the balance of the native ecological order. Their image parodies Haraway’s emancipatory cyborg ideal, instead becoming tools of capital-driven ecological violence. Megodonts are physiologically altered to suit human preferences and thus become animal slaves who provide energy and productivity, losing their autonomous lives, their right to exist and their identity as moral subjects. Emiko, a windup girl designed for servitude, becomes a sexualized spectacle, her body reflecting instrumental rationality as blind technology progress erodes humanity and new species agency. Bacigalupi urges a return to a sustainable technological ecology and a positive mind to interact with multiple otherness, emphasizing posthuman ethical deliberation and interspecies communication to avert dystopian collapse.