Author:
Aparna. M
Abstract:
Becky Chambers’s Monk and Robot duology, A Psalm for the Wild-Built (2021) and A Prayer for the Crown-Shy (2022), presents a quiet but radical reimagining of human-machine relationships. Set in the ecologically balanced world of Panga, where sentient robots have long withdrawn from human society, the story follows a tea monk named Dex and a returning robot, Mosscap, on a shared journey prompted by the question: “What do people need?”. Rather than dramatizing technological power or conflict, Chambers crafts a narrative rooted in attentive companionship and a quiet ethics of care. This article argues that the series models a posthuman ethic based not on transcendence or utility, but on relational subjectivity and co-becoming. Drawing on Rosi Braidotti’s The Posthuman and Donna Haraway’s The Companion Species Manifesto, the article examines how Dex and Mosscap’s evolving bond disrupts anthropocentric narratives and offers an alternative vision of care. By interpreting Mosscap not merely as a machine but as a companion species, akin to Haraway’s ethically entangled cyborgs, the article explores how speculative fiction can generate new modes of ethical imagination. Chambers’s work suggests that kinship and understanding arise not from shared essence or total comprehension, but from the act of moving alongside one another with openness, humility, and sustained attention.
Keywords:
Becky Chambers, Monk and Robot duology, Posthumanism, Rosi Braidotti, Donna Haraway, Relational Subjectivity
Article Info:
Received: 30 Aug 2025; Received in revised form: 27 Sep 2025; Accepted: 30 Sep 2025; Available online: 05 Oct 2025
DOI:
10.22161/ijels.105.44