In the postcyberpunk narrative of Blade Runner 2049 (Villeneuve 2017), the virtual embodiment of the affective AI artificial intelligence Joi is a central concern. Her virtual body itself functions as a complex locus wherein her multiple and contradictory identities – as a personalised companion, a mass-produced commodity, and a nascent form of potential autonomous consciousness – are constantly negotiated. Drawing upon the theoretical lenses of virtual somatechnics and identity negotiation, this paper analyses the multifaceted significance of Joi's affective commitment. The inquiry parses this significance into three dimensions: Joi’s initial lack of ontological weight as a technologically determined object; the emotional weight she accumulates through her co-created relationship with K; and the ethical weight she ultimately claims through her climactic act of self-sacrifice. This analysis leads to the core inquiry of the paper: can a programmed entity, through such profound affective commitment, transcend its inherent commodity status to achieve a form of subjective authenticity? Ultimately, this research contends that Joi’s virtual existence challenges conventional ontological boundaries. Her case offers a critical perspective for understanding the intricate entanglement of technology, corporeality, and the moral status of artificial beings in the digital epoch.
Neo Xia (Wed,) studied this question.
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