Trading Dopamine for Your Soul

- Posted in BP01 by

Contrary to popular belief, social media has been around for nearly three decades. It is only recently, within the last twenty years, that it has truly become a standard. Human connection has been around since the dawn of time, yet social media has offered instant connection across nearly any distance. Although this is a huge accomplishment in the technological space, it has impacted people’s connection to humanity. You are now able to connect screen-to-screen, but not have human-to-human interactions. During 2020, the Black Lives Matter (BLM) truly took flight in the eyes of the media. People were recording altercations involving black individuals and police officers that would often be fatal. At first, sympathy was a driving force for change, but it slowly bled to a cold detachment. You could be sitting at home, on TikTok, and see a post showing the uncensored murder of an individual, scroll, and see members of the Hype House dancing to a popular song. This is also seen currently, where Palestinians would grab your attention with a trendy video, then cut it to a pleading message and unveil the horrors happening in their homeland. At first, there is moral compassion and an invocation of humanity seeing these atrocities, but over time, it becomes normal, and like any other post that did not trigger a dopamine response, it is scrolled past. Though this is a current struggle, it can closely mirror the cyberpunk genre. In cyberpunk, there is a disconnect in humanity due to the prevalence of technology or progression. There is also a need to stay in the space that is ideal to them, which is often the cybernetic version that has been established by an algorithm. It would be ideal for a person to scroll past an emotion-involving video to stay in the safety that the algorithm has created. Social media has twisted empathy into something unrecognizable in terms of the textbook definition. It is reported, in an American study, that people have a harder time responding to emotions, others, and their own, the more they use social media (Martingano, 2023). This is something that cyberpunk has warned about: losing connection with yourself and others. Li states, “The limitations of a physical body, the uncontrollable emotions in humanity, these are considered as flaws and obstacles as the path toward the ultimate utopia. The pursue of it is in fact, not building a better society for next generations but falling into a well of a ‘soul-less’ world, a world of human slave themselves by information and technology, in other words, slaved by instrumental rationality.” Rather than the installation of bionic limbs or AI chips to insert technological control, social media has taken over human emotion. There has been a shift in humanity that is less than human. People can no longer connect the same way as they did prior to the rise of social media. There is a rise of narcissism, apathy, and a dimmed sense of morality (Martingaano, 2023). If we continue to scroll past atrocities in favor of dopamine-safe content, we risk fulfilling the genre’s prophecy: a world where we are perfectly connected by technology, yet completely alone in our indifference.

References Martingano, A. J. (2023, May 9). Social media and empathy around the globe. Psychology Today. https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/what-do-you-mean/202305/social-media-and-empathy-around-the-globe Li, H. (2022). Reflection of modern society through cyberpunk. BCP Social Sciences & Humanities, 16, 600–604. https://doi.org/10.54691/bcpssh.v16i.518

Black, Woman, Other

- Posted in BP03 by

There are many instances in which fluidity is an enabler for liberation. The idea of being fluid, of not fitting into distinct categories, naturally is liberatory in a world where categories and labels determine social hierarchy. Though it has been a discussed topic for a while, gender fluidity and conversations about how gender is experienced have become even more prevalent today especially among Black queer communities. The new understandings of gender and its fluid categories have freed many from conservative constraints on what is expected of specific genders and what is possible for specific genders. Though this has been a significant shift in the queer community, it is clear that the larger population has not adopted the same ideologies as there are many conversations and pushes for people to identify in distinct categories. This is most prevalent in conservative communities. One of the most glaring recent examples being when rapper Nicki Minaj joined Erika Kirk at AmericaFest and was quoted saying, “Boys, be boys…it’s okay be boys…There’s nothing wrong with being a boy. (Bynum 2025)” enter image description here

It becomes clear that gender fluidity, whether that be through dress or actual gender identity is frowned upon by those who seek to keep us under harsh conservative ruling. We have seen historically and in this class that labels are able to keep us confined into specific categories. Categories that define how others are meant to treat us and the humanity that we are allotted. Historically many labels have sought to oppress rather than understand, creating hierarchal systems that leave some advantaged and others disadvantaged. These labels also do not allow for hybridity as they exist within strict, immovable confines when assigned to others.

One particular example of this fluidity has been seen in Black non-binary people. Many Black non-binary people who were assigned female at birth have been discussing their feelings of being non-binary but also still aligning with the label of being a Black woman. One Tik Tok creator outlines their feelings about this being that most of their lived experience is as a Black woman and those experiences have shaped who they are as a person inherently (Black 2021). Though many would turn their nose up at this idea, when we think about how the freedom to be fluid aids in understanding these nuances that are not available with rigidity. In this fluidity we see people outside of their immediate labels, but understand them deeper as humans based on their lived experiences and understandings of themselves. This idea is present in both Monáe’s album through the mixing of android with human, with real and imagined and in Haraway’s idea of hybridity.

Being able to be outside of the binary in a world where the binary seeks to minimize and oppress you is an extremely liberating thing. Not only does gender fluidity reject this oppression, but it brings to question what it really means to be a man or woman outside of the roles that society has assigned to those labels.

No AI was used in the creation of this blog post.

References Black, V. [@hypochrisy]. (2021, June 8) [Video]. TikTok. https://www.tiktok.com/@hypochrisy/video/6978955145086356741?_r=1&_t=ZT-9476bOhY3sE Bynum, Z. (2025, December 29). Backlash grows after Nicki Minaj’s Turning Point USA appearance; Bernice King responds. Cbsnews.com. https://www.cbsnews.com/atlanta/news/atlanta-faith-leaders-respond-as-nicki-minaj-faces-backlash-over-turning-point-usa-appearance/