Technologically-enhanced human bodies can be the stuff of dreams, but also of nightmares. The contradictions and complexities of the cyborg therefore hold particular appeal to programme makers
of dramatic TV narratives. Bronwen Calvert examines the uses and representations of the cyborg in this ground-breaking text, by looking at its frequent appearance in a wide variety of popular
and cult shows: from the iconic Daleks of Doctor Who and bionic female empowerment in Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, to the duality of humanoid and distinctly robotic cyborgs in
Battlestar Galactica. In doing so, she reveals how television’s defining traits shape our experience of cyborgs and help us as viewers to question contemporary issues such as surveillance and
terrorism, as well as the function of simulation and ultimately what it means to be human.