Sign in or register
for additional privileges

MACHINE DREAMS

Alexei Taylor, Author

You appear to be using an older verion of Internet Explorer. For the best experience please upgrade your IE version or switch to a another web browser.

Sources of fascination (4) - Mechanization of men


“I’d imagine the whole world was a one big machine – machines never come with extra parts you know. They always come with the exact amount they need. So I figured, if the world was a one big machine, I couldn’t be an extra part. I had to be here for some reason. “ – Hugo, from the movie Hugo(2011)

The significance of the automatons is not only of its humanlike appearance, and what that projects, but also of their specialized functions and abilities of imitating a single human behavior. (228, Feldman) For Hugo, his fascination with machines is that they have a definite purpose of existence. Being an orphan boy practically raising himself up, assurance that he is not useless but even he has a purpose in life is what he needs the most. Although they may be confined to a single task, the specificity of the purpose of machines can be seen as ideal in the way that it has a clear purpose of existence.

As it can be seen from the snapshot of a scene of the movie, Hugo is looking out from a clock tower of a train station in Paris, where the movie majorly takes place. The clock tower is also where he considers home. It is shown numerously in the movie of how Hugo maneuvers his way around the gigantic clock. It is as if Hugo is part of the machine as a whole, of which Hugo’s assigned duty is to maintain the clock to run exactly on time. The biggest reason why Hugo takes refuge in the clock tower is to hide from the train station inspector to avoid being sent to the orphanage. Here, the machine is used a defense mechanism protecting Hugo from the outside world. The detached nature of an automaton is another ideal that it embodies, an example of which is well illustrated in the essay Joey the Mechanical Boy by Noor Al-Mahruqi. The ability for an automaton to simple-mindedly focus on a single task is drastically contrasting to its human-looking appearance, and thus is what triggers the feeling of the uncanny.
Comment on this page
 

Discussion of "Sources of fascination (4) - Mechanization of men"

Add your voice to this discussion.

Checking your signed in status ...

Previous page on path Automatons and its sources of fascination, page 7 of 9 Next page on path

Related:  Angry birds shirt tagsJaquet-Droz - "The Writer"Jaquet-Droz automatonsBibliographyGregory Barsamian - Feral FontFinal essay - ProposalPhenakistoscope Phenakistiscope Optical Toy FantascopeAngry Birds as a social toolMaintaining the Writerthe Writer - insideThe ideas and values behindthe WriterAre Humanzees Possible?AlterityResourcesSources of fascination (3) - Threat of automatonsFrans Zwartjes "Spectator" (1970)Jaquet-Droz automataAuraAutomatons and its sources of fascinationFinal essay backgroundthe WriterHugo magic trickPersistence of visionThe first encounterHugo and the cityTechnology used in automataThe Bird's social purposeHybridBershka and its connection to Angry BirdsThe WriterThe UncannyThe technology behindThe digesting duckThe Matrix PosterWhat makes an observer modern; Jiwon ShinHugoSources of fascination (2) - Representations of memoryPresence footprintsSymbolicGregory Barsamian - RunnerAutomata and Mimesis on the Stage of Theatre HistoryAngry BirdsNanook of the North, Robert FLAHERTY, 1921Toothed wheelsSpectatorQuestionsEpistemologyEdison's Eve: A Magical History of the Quest for Mechanical LifeHypothesisAura handwrittenSources of fascination (1) - Playing godMatrix - The pillSimulacrabackground for ethnographyHugo turns into an automatonConclusionPresenceBibliographyDevelopment story of the Angry BirdsjiwonThe Human Touch: Towards a Historical Anthropology and Dream Analysis of Self-acting Instruments