This article explores the articulations between the concepts of human and post-human in the two versions of the TV series Battlestar Galactica, Glen Larson’s (1978-79) and Ronald D. Moore’s reboot, first aired in 2003. At the center of both versions, but more specifically in the more recent one, stands the figure of the Cylon, a man-made creation which only reaches its full potential after a rebellion against its creators. Although the Cylon in Glen Larson’s version is simply an army of robot-soldiers under the command of the traitor Baltar, it is possible to perceive (in such characters as the Cylon Lucifer) a budding reflection on the blurred lines between man and machine. In Ronald D. Moore’s version, however, this consideration is the d...
This thesis explores the extent to which science fiction conveys latent sociocultural attitudes abou...
Emerging in American, Science Fiction films in the 1970s, the figure of the cyborg has become the si...
Portrayals of humanoid robots in television series draw heavily from the historical and cultural myt...
This article discusses the possibility that Ronald D. Moore’s Battlestar Galactica (Sci-Fi, then Syf...
The nature of humanity and what it means to be human has long been the focus of science fiction writ...
This article explores how Ronald D. Moore’s Battlestar Galactica reinvents and resolutely updates ap...
Paper on performance and personal identity in the television series “Battlestar Galactica”
The science fiction television series Battlestar Galactica explores the differences between human an...
International audienceThis paper deals with the way the science fiction series Battlestar Galactica ...
This article explores how time, destiny and freedom are represented in Ronald D. Moore’s reboot of B...
Battlestar Galactica, a television series that aired on the SyFy Channel from 2003 to 2009, tells th...
The article considers the figure of the cyborg in television and films in the period between 1960 an...
The re-imagined television series Battlestar Galactica features few natural environments and Earth i...
This article considers how Western heteronormative patriarchy defined and desexualised the bromance ...
The theological dimension of the pilot mini-series (2003) of the reimagined Battlestar Galactica (Ro...
This thesis explores the extent to which science fiction conveys latent sociocultural attitudes abou...
Emerging in American, Science Fiction films in the 1970s, the figure of the cyborg has become the si...
Portrayals of humanoid robots in television series draw heavily from the historical and cultural myt...
This article discusses the possibility that Ronald D. Moore’s Battlestar Galactica (Sci-Fi, then Syf...
The nature of humanity and what it means to be human has long been the focus of science fiction writ...
This article explores how Ronald D. Moore’s Battlestar Galactica reinvents and resolutely updates ap...
Paper on performance and personal identity in the television series “Battlestar Galactica”
The science fiction television series Battlestar Galactica explores the differences between human an...
International audienceThis paper deals with the way the science fiction series Battlestar Galactica ...
This article explores how time, destiny and freedom are represented in Ronald D. Moore’s reboot of B...
Battlestar Galactica, a television series that aired on the SyFy Channel from 2003 to 2009, tells th...
The article considers the figure of the cyborg in television and films in the period between 1960 an...
The re-imagined television series Battlestar Galactica features few natural environments and Earth i...
This article considers how Western heteronormative patriarchy defined and desexualised the bromance ...
The theological dimension of the pilot mini-series (2003) of the reimagined Battlestar Galactica (Ro...
This thesis explores the extent to which science fiction conveys latent sociocultural attitudes abou...
Emerging in American, Science Fiction films in the 1970s, the figure of the cyborg has become the si...
Portrayals of humanoid robots in television series draw heavily from the historical and cultural myt...