image: Cover art to augmented.
Credit: The MIT Press, 2026.
For immediate release
Cambridge, MA [May 2026] --- A provocative rethinking of the intersection of death, technology, and disability, for a better life.
This spring, The MIT Press published augmented: life and death as a cyborg by Candi K. Cann. augmented is a provocative rethinking of the intersection of death, technology, and disability, for a better life.
You can access the open-access edition of the book here: https://direct.mit.edu/books/book/6101/augmentedlife-and-death-as-a-cyborg
We are all cyborgs, relying on technology—whether it’s Alexa, a pacemaker, or a titanium knee—for our quotidian existence. In our deep connection to a technological world, from robots to augmented and virtual realities, metaverses, and gaming, Candi Cann sees an opportunity, and good reason, to question our ideas about accessibility and inclusion. In augmented, she asks us to reconsider traditional notions of biology and death.vHaving relied on hearing aids from the age of four, Cann uses her experience to challenge readers to reconsider their assumptions about technologies and their role in life—and death. She also focuses on what it means that most of us are living longer with the intervention of medical technologies, and how a better understanding of our relationship to technology will grant us greater control as we age. Drawing on her life experience in Asia, the author explains how cultural and religious views of machines and artificial intelligence vary globally—in particular, how a Western fear of machines contrasts with an animistic worldview that can see machines as conduits of care for others, embedding spiritual possibilities.
“Technological innovation creates systemic and long-lasting shifts across society, and while we may be skeptical” of AI and other cutting-edge innovations, “we can no longer afford to look the other way” when it comes to their cultural impacts, Baylor University religious studies professor Cann (Dying to Eat) argues in this thought-provoking study. Cann posits that everything from hearing aids and titanium knees to smartwatches qualifies as “augmentations” that make humans into part-machine “cyborgs.”
Drawing on her own travels, she theorizes that the West fears innovative technology due to cultural ideas about human exceptionalism, while East Asian countries embrace technological advancement because they respect robots as “soul-possible or soul-different.” She surveys a range of current and possible future technologies for augmenting human life, along the way spotlighting how disability “has often been a driving force behind.... technological innovations...Being part machine might, in fact, make us more human, not less,” Cann asserts.
The book was featured in The MIT Press Reader here: Read an excerpt: What America Could Learn From Asia’s Robot Revolution
Former Fulbright Scholar, Candi K. Cann is a professor at Baylor University with a research focus on death, dying, and grief, and the intersections of marginality, diversity, and death technologies.
Endorsements:
“A brilliant, compassionate, and provocative reframing of what it means to be human in a tech-entwined world—augmented urgently calls us to protect what matters most: care, connection, and meaning.”
—Shoshana Ungerleider, Host and Producer, TED Health; Founder, End Well
“Insightful, powerful, essential. Through a dialog between personal experience, spirituality, and science, Candi Cann brings a new understanding of how technological augmentations will impact life and death. A needed text for anyone interested in the future of mankind.”
—Matthieu J. Guitton, Editor-in-Chief of Computers in Human Behavior and Computers in Human Behavior: Artificial Humans
“Candi Cann’s book brings together three very important and often neglected intersecting topics: death, disability, and technology. Exactly the death studies scholar we need to help us understand what it means to grieve today.”
—John Troyer, author of Technologies of the Human Corpse
“Candi Cann urges reflection on how we are, in effect, cyborgs and calls for building a more inclusive, compassionate community.”
—Gil-Soo Han, author of Funeral Rites in Contemporary Korea