Despite the differences in sub-genre between the two stories, both Tiptree and Egan are interested in exploring what can happen when the mind is favored over the …show more content…
In “Learning To Be Me,” the narration is set up so that the reader considers their own relationship to their body as shaped by technology while P. Burke’s dilemma sparks an exploration of how society can shape one’s relationship to the body both in and out of cyberspace. P. Burke loses her identity to the artificial body, as she “can no longer clearly recall that she exists apart from Delphi” (Tiptree, 68). Egan’s story reflects mostly on one main character introspectively, while Tiptree explores a view that is of the outside looking in. P. Burke’s preference of an artificial body over her own, as intensified by the people who hire her to do so initially, makes the reader more aware of how the body should not be viewed as separate from identity for the narrator in Egan’s