Dr Emily Hoyle
@emilyehoyle.substack.com
65 followers 110 following 33 posts
Researcher and Associate Lecturer specialised in Gender Studies Interests: cultural imaginaries, transhumanism, feminist technoscience, sociology of futures 🌌
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emilyehoyle.substack.com
If you are interested in this article by @newyorker.com about the men who are investing in biohacking and longevity technologies so they can live forever you might like my doctoral thesis that explains how the desire for immortality is gender in the making: eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/22...
Reposted by Dr Emily Hoyle
annettedittert.bsky.social
Musk is inciting violence on London's streets.Tommy Robinson is financed by US tech bros. These are all very direct attempts to destabilise the British state.

Starmer needs to stand up to this. A government that doesn't defend its country's values against these blatant attacks is not doing its job.
emilyehoyle.substack.com
On my run I listened to this podcast episode. The use of frontier is a key part of their storytelling and it is no coincidence these bros are cosying up to Trump's government as we witness a strengthening of patriarchal power. I discuss all of this in my thesis. open.spotify.com/episode/3J7b...
The immortality bros: the new frontiers of health
open.spotify.com
emilyehoyle.substack.com
Are universities for education, or for profit?
emilyehoyle.substack.com
Listened to this on my morning run about how in the 1960s women were excluded from long distance running due to false fears it would make them infertile, or worse kill them. A reminder the marathon (and running generally) is a contested site for gender and sex. open.spotify.com/episode/5gi4...
Run, Switzer, Run: The Women Who Broke the Marathon Taboo
Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford · Episode
open.spotify.com
emilyehoyle.substack.com
April next year will be running #TheLondonMarathon for Prostate Cancer Research. This charity means a great deal to me. You can read about my motivation at www.justgiving.com/page/emilyrunsthemarathon - this is also the place to donate (thank you!). Wish me luck! @justgiving.bsky.social
emilyehoyle.substack.com
Congratulations to all the future undergraduates receiving their #Alevelresults today! ⭐ I hope part of the media coverage includes the savage cuts to university staff and courses across HE that will diminish the exceptional and diverse teaching these undergraduates deserve @ucu.org.uk
emilyehoyle.substack.com
When I first began researching transhumanism it was considered fringe, and I would frequently have to explain what it is and why it is significant. #Mountainhead puts it on full view and pokes fun at it.

open.substack.com/pub/emilyeho...
Four Men and a Mountain
The tech bromance of Jesse Armstrong's Mountainhead (2025) marks a cultural shift
open.substack.com
emilyehoyle.substack.com
Fortunate to have attended the #JennySaville exhibition at the #NationalPortraitGallery. Her work is kinetic, and in dialogue with the passive nudes of the classical painters. For me, it also emphasised the importance of Gender Studies in a time when Gender Studies courses are being stripped back.
emilyehoyle.substack.com
If you are interested in this article by @newyorker.com about the men who are investing in biohacking and longevity technologies so they can live forever you might like my doctoral thesis that explains how the desire for immortality is gender in the making: eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/22...
emilyehoyle.substack.com
This from the creator Alex Light emphasizes how this new "facial shapewear" from Skims has disturbing historical roots and connotations.
emilyehoyle.substack.com
Strings writes, "the phobia about fatness and the preference for thinness have not, principally or historically, been about health. Instead, they have been one way the body has been used to craft and legitimate race, sex, and class hierarchies."
emilyehoyle.substack.com
Skims profits off controversy, and I agree with the commentary this so-called "facial shapewear" contributes to the Ozempic culture of slenderness and control of the feminine body. But also it made me think of the book Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia by Sabrina Strings.
emilyehoyle.substack.com
Skims profits off controversy, and I agree with the commentary this so-called "facial shapewear" contributes to the Ozempic culture of slenderness and control of the feminine body. But also it made me think of the book Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia by Sabrina Strings.
emilyehoyle.substack.com
In my most recent Substack I explore @jessearmstrong.bsky.social's #Mountainhead read it here: emilyehoyle.substack.com/p/four-men-a...
emilyehoyle.substack.com
Thank you Carolyn! Looking forward to seeing you too 😊
emilyehoyle.substack.com
My thoughts too. The "I need to get out" but staying for X amount of years seemed disingenuous, among other things that I had a hard time believing.
emilyehoyle.substack.com
Oh yes, thanks for this. Careless People fell short for me in some ways so this might fill the void.
emilyehoyle.substack.com
Sunday and finishing a book 🫶🏻☕
emilyehoyle.substack.com
Interesting episode of @onthemedia.bsky.social. Guest Ed Zitron exposes how the so-called concerns from the industry about the safety of AI is actual disgenerous marketing and any real concerns should be about the environment damage and harms from misinformation.
open.spotify.com/episode/3LlO...
Inside the Artificial Intelligence Hype Cycle. And How AI is Making Music
On the Media · Episode
open.spotify.com
emilyehoyle.substack.com
My latest Substack (5 minute read) delves into the tech bromance of Jesse Armstrong's film #Mountainhead 🏔️

emilyehoyle.substack.com/p/four-men-a...