Results for ' feminist technoscience'

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  1.  39
    Why feminist technoscience and feminist phenomenology should engage with each other: on subjectification/subjectivity.Kristin Zeiler - 2020 - Feminist Theory 21 (3):367-390.
    Feminist technoscience and feminist phenomenology have seldom been brought into dialogue with each other, despite them sharing concerns with subjectivity and normativity, and despite both of them moving away from sharp subject-object distinctions. This is unfortunate. This article argues that, while differences between these strands need to be acknowledged, such differences should be put to productive use. The article discusses a case of school bullying, and suggests that bringing these analytic perspectives together enables and sharpens examinations of (...)
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  2.  20
    Feminist technoscience studies.Nina Lykke & Cecilia Åsberg - 2010 - European Journal of Women's Studies 17 (4):299-305.
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  3.  46
    Cripping Feminist Technoscience.Aimi Hamraie - 2015 - Hypatia 30 (1):307-313.
  4.  24
    Banu Subramaniam. Holy Science: The Biopolitics of Hindu Nationalism. (Feminist Technosciences.) xviii + 291 pp., notes, index. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2019. $30 (paper). Hardcover and e-book available. [REVIEW]Amit Prasad - 2020 - Isis 111 (3):694-695.
  5. Modest₋Witness@Second₋Millennium.FemaleMan₋Meets₋OncoMouse: feminism and technoscience.Donna Jeanne Haraway - 1997 - New York: Routledge.
    Modest_Witness@Second_Millennium. FemaleMan_Meets_OncoMouse explores the roles of stories, figures, dreams, theories, facts, delusions, advertising, institutions, economic arrangements, publishing practices, scientific advances, and politics in twentieth- century technoscience. The book's title is an e-mail address. With it, Haraway locates herself and her readers in a sprawling net of associations more far-flung than the Internet. The address is not a cozy home. There is no innocent place to stand in the world where the book's author figure, FemaleMan, encounters DuPont's controversial laboratory rodent, (...)
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  6.  8
    Picturizing the scattered ontologies of Alzheimer’s disease: Towards a materialist feminist approach to visual technoscience studies.Jennifer Lum & Cecilia Åsberg - 2010 - European Journal of Women's Studies 17 (4):323-345.
    Alzheimer’s disease is emerging into public view in unprecedented ways. Foremost among these is the embodied form of elderly men and women appearing in commercial imagery for patient advocacy groups or pharmaceutical advertisements, but scientific imagery also seeps into the visual media cultures that surround us. The recent reconfiguration of Alzheimer’s disease is due to expanding ageing populations, an aggressive biopharmaceutical industry becoming a fast-growing material-semiotic realm that is providing powerful images of both gendered and racialized embodiment. Such a visual, (...)
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  7.  36
    Resisting Power, Retooling Justice: Promises of Feminist Postcolonial Technosciences.Banu Subramaniam & Anne Pollock - 2016 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 41 (6):951-966.
    This special issue explores intersections of feminism, postcolonialism, and technoscience. The papers emerged out of a 2014 research seminar on Feminist Postcolonial Science and Technology Studies at the Institute for Research on Women and Gender, University of Michigan. Through innovative engagement with rich empirical cases and theoretical trends in postcolonial theory, feminist theory, and STS, the papers trace local and global circulations of technoscience. They illuminate ways in which science and technology are imbricated in circuits of (...)
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  8.  24
    Multiple ontologies of Alzheimer’s disease in Still Alice and A Song for Martin: A feminist visual studies of technoscience perspective.Dragana Lukić - 2019 - European Journal of Women's Studies 26 (4):375-389.
    The prevalence of dementia is increasing worldwide but there is still no hope of a cure. Huge resources go into biomedical research, whose reductive ‘enactment’ has severe consequences for women, who are predominantly affected by dementia. To challenge such tragic enactment, this article considers ‘multiple ontologies’ of the most common type of dementia – Alzheimer’s disease – in the popular fictional film adaptations Still Alice and A Song for Martin. Using a post-humanist account of feminist visual studies of (...), this comparative film analysis reveals how gender supersedes AD oversteering the hierarchical dualisms between health and pathology, human and nonhuman, and biomedical and artistic modes of knowing about Alzheimer’s. The author argues that these films stress the potential of the arts, as a multisensorial post-humanist embodied state of becoming with AD, to challenge hierarchical dualisms and innovatively contribute to dementia care. (shrink)
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  9.  14
    The culture of biotechnology: Donna J. Haraway, ModestWitness@SecondMillennium. FemaleMan MeetsOncoMouse : Feminism and technoscience [Book Review].Alessandra Tanesini - unknown
  10. @seizing the means of reproduction: entanglements of feminism, health, and technoscience.Michelle Murphy - 2012
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  11. Donna J. Harway, ModestWitness@SecondMillennium.FemaleMan©_MeetsOncoMouse™: Feminism and Technoscience[REVIEW]Donna J. Haraway - 1997 - Journal of the History of Biology 30 (3):494-497.
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  12.  66
    Review: Donna Haraway: ModestWitness@SecondMillenium. FemaleMan©MeetsOnceMouse™. Feminism and Technoscience.Walltraud Ernst - 1998 - Die Philosophin 9 (18):111-116.
  13.  38
    Biology is a feminist issue: Interview with Lynda Birke.Lynda Birke & Cecilia Åsberg - 2010 - European Journal of Women's Studies 17 (4):413-423.
    This is an interview with Professor Lynda Birke, one of the key figures of feminist science studies. She is a pioneer of feminist biology and of materialist feminist thought, as well as of the new and emerging field of hum-animal studies. This interview was conducted over email in two time periods, in the spring of 2008 and 2010. The format allowed for comments on previous writings and an engagement in an open-ended dialogue. Professor Birke talks about her (...)
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  14.  23
    Modest Witness@SecondMillennium.FemaleMan.© MeetsOncomouse™: Feminism and Technoscience[REVIEW]Kathleen Lennon - 1998 - Women’s Philosophy Review 19:47-49.
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  15.  5
    The Possibility of the Alliance of ANT and Feminism: Through the Conception of Actors in ‘Technoscience’.Heesook Hwang - 2015 - Korean Feminist Philosophy 23 (null):61-88.
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  16.  29
    ModestWitness@SecondMillenium. Femaleman. copyright Meets_OncoMouse trademark: Feminism and Technoscience. Donna J. Haraway. [REVIEW]Hilary Rose - 1998 - Isis 89 (3):565-566.
  17.  35
    Donna J. Harway, ModestWitness@SecondMillennium.FemaleMan©_MeetsOncoMouse™: Feminism and Technoscience[REVIEW]Evelynn M. Hammonds - 1997 - Journal of the History of Biology 30 (3):494-497.
  18.  7
    Book Review: Seizing the Means of Reproduction: Entanglements of Feminism, Health, and Technoscience by Michelle Murphy. [REVIEW]Gayle Sulik - 2013 - Gender and Society 27 (5):760-762.
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  19.  85
    Imaging the Visceral Soma : A Corporeal Feminist Interpretation.Ingrid Richardson & Carly Harper - 2006 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 6 (1):1-13.
    Feminist philosophers of technoscience have long argued that it is vital that we question biomedical and scientific claims to an immaterial and disembodied objectivity, and also, more specifically, that we disable the conception of medical visualising technologies as neutral or transparent conduits to the “fact” of the body. In this paper we suggest that corporeal feminism is well situated to provide such a critique. Feminist phenomenologists over the past decade have theorised embodiment in a number of critical (...)
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  20.  13
    Speculative feminism and the shifting frontiers of bioscience: envisioning reproductive futures with synthetic gametes through the ethnographic method.Mianna Meskus - 2023 - Feminist Theory 24 (2):151-169.
    Scientists are developing a technique called in vitro gametogenesis or IVG to generate synthetic gametes for research and, potentially, for treating infertility. What would it mean for feminist concerns over the future of reproductive practice and biotechnological development if egg and sperm cells could be produced in laboratory conditions? In this article, I take on the question by discussing the emerging technique of IVG through the speculative feminist analysis of ambiguous reproductive futures. Feminist cultural and science studies (...)
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  21.  62
    Making worlds: epistemological, ontological and political dimensions of technoscience[REVIEW]Jutta Weber - 2010 - Poiesis and Praxis 7 (1-2):17-36.
    This paper outlines some of the new epistemological and ontological assumptions of contemporary technoscience thereby reframing the question of an epochal break. Important aspects are the question of a new techno-rationality, but also the constitution of a ‘New World Order Inc.’, with its new ‘politics of life itself’, the reconfiguration of categories such as race, class and gender in technoscience, as well as the amalgamation of everyday life, technoscience and culture. Given the difficulties of ‘proving’ a new (...)
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  22.  50
    Biopolitics without Bodies: Feminism and the Feeling of Life.Nathan Snaza - 2020 - Feminist Studies 46 (1):178-203.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:178 Feminist Studies 46, no. 1. © 2020 by Feminist Studies, Inc. Nathan Snaza Biopolitics without Bodies: Feminism and the Feeling of Life Against a restrictive and imperialist concept of “the human,” which has become globalized during the long march of colonialist, heterosexist modernity, Samantha Frost’s Biocultural Creatures summons “counter-concepts” of the human that might authorize new political possibilities and theories of what it means to be (...)
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  23.  82
    PharmAD-ventures: A Feminist Analysis of the Pharmacological Imaginary of Alzheimer’s Disease.Cecilia Åsberg & Jennifer Lum - 2009 - Body and Society 15 (4):95-117.
    Alzheimer’s disease (AD) may be situated within a cultural landscape produced, in part, by demographics and the marketing strategies of an aggressive biopharmaceutical industry. The simultaneously corporeal and visual domain of advertisements for anti-AD drugs generates dynamic images of gender and embodiment, and it also lends itself to feminist interventions engaging with the images and ideas circulating around aging, medicine and the body. In this article, we investigate advertisements targeting medical practitioners treating patients with AD. Working within a methodological (...)
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  24.  61
    Design for a common world: On ethical agency and cognitive justice. [REVIEW]Maja van der Velden - 2009 - Ethics and Information Technology 11 (1):37-47.
    The paper discusses two answers to the question, How to address the harmful effects of technology? The first response proposes a complete separation of science from culture, religion, and ethics. The second response finds harm in the logic and method of science itself. The paper deploys a feminist technoscience approach to overcome these accounts of neutral or deterministic technological agency. In this technoscience perspective, agency is not an attribute of autonomous human users alone but enacted and performed (...)
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  25.  40
    Design for a common world: On ethical agency and cognitive justice. [REVIEW]Maja Velden - 2009 - Ethics and Information Technology 11 (1):37-47.
    The paper discusses two answers to the question, How to address the harmful effects of technology? The first response proposes a complete separation of science from culture, religion, and ethics. The second response finds harm in the logic and method of science itself. The paper deploys a feminist technoscience approach to overcome these accounts of neutral or deterministic technological agency. In this technoscience perspective, agency is not an attribute of autonomous human users alone but enacted and performed (...)
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  26.  13
    Book Review: Queering Reproduction: Achieving Pregnancy in the Age of Technoscience[REVIEW]Tracey Jensen - 2009 - Feminist Review 93 (1):143-145.
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  27.  18
    Redefining Bioavailability through Migrant Egg Donors in Spain.Christina Weis & Michal Nahman - 2023 - Body and Society 29 (1):79-109.
    This article utilises feminist technoscience studies’ notions of bodily ‘materialisation’ and ‘ontological choreographies’, offering a cyborg feminist account of ‘bioavailability’ as embodied becomings, rather than a fixed ontological state of being. Drawn from 2 years’ ethnographic study in in vitro fertilisation clinics in Spain with migrant women who provided eggs to the cross-border in vitro fertilisation industry, this work explores how global understandings of race and inequalities, clinical practices and women’s own emotional and physical labours collectively produce (...)
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  28.  27
    The Shape of This Wonder? Consecrated Science and New Cosmology Affects.Courtney O'Dell-Chaib - 2019 - Zygon 54 (2):387-395.
    In response to Lisa Sideris's provocative new book Consecrating Science: Wonder, Knowledge and the Natural World and in conversation with voices from feminist technoscience, this article challenges the deracinated wonder of new cosmology encounters in two senses. First, by tracing how it is uprooted from critical perspectives on scientific knowledge production. And second, by contending deracinated wonder is ripped from cultural and historical contexts thus erasing embodied inequalities. Deracinated wonder attached to uncritical forms of science, I argue, solidifies (...)
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  29.  14
    Detecting bodily and discursive noise in the naming of biotech products.Katherine Harrison - 2010 - European Journal of Women's Studies 17 (4):347-361.
    This article contributes to existing feminist technoscience analyses by proposing a new tool for examining how norms governing viable and unviable bodies are discursively constructed in an increasingly technologized world. This tool is the result of synthesizing two existing concepts: white noise from the field of media theory/information studies, and the abject from psychosemiotics/gender studies. Synthesizing these two concepts produces an enriched term for detecting interrelations between discursive disturbances and disturbances in bodily norms. In this article, the synthesized (...)
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  30.  13
    BioDwelling: A participatory approach to living with living material.Louise Mackenzie & Kaajal Modi - 2023 - Technoetic Arts 21 (2):243-263.
    BioDwelling is an arts-led research project that brings ethical concerns of culture, gender and multispecies relationality from the feminist technosciences into direct conversation with the emerging field of biotechnological architecture (bio-architecture). Working within a multi-disciplinary bio-architecture research group, we develop a practice-led methodology to facilitate the exploration of questions that arise when we begin to engineer more-than-human dwelling spaces. In this article we give a brief overview of the work of the Hub for Biotechnology in the Built Environment (HBBE) (...)
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  31.  22
    The Techno-Barbie Speaks Back: Experiments with Gendered Hormones.Bryan Lim, Adam Christianson, Emily Jay Nicholls, Alexandra Aldridge & Alex Dymock - 2023 - Paragraph 46 (1):30-45.
    In Testo Junkie, Preciado briefly introduces the figure of the ‘techno-Barbie’. Contrasted with his own Testogel-fuelled pornographic experiments, the possibilities of oestrogen or progesterone seem somewhat uncharitably foreclosed upon. Though Preciado draws our attention to the gendered politics of chemical enhancement and hormonal justice, it begs the question: where do we draw the line between experimentation and chemical domination? We engage with the figure of the techno-Barbie to explore our own experiments with hormones and gendered agency in the boundaries of (...)
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  32. The gendered cyborg: a reader.Gill Kirkup (ed.) - 2000 - New York: Routledge in association with the Open University.
    The Gendered Cyborg brings together material from a variety of disciplines that analyze the relationship between gender and technoscience, and the way that this relationship is represented through ideas, language and visual imagery. The book opens with key feminist articles from the history and philosophy of science. They look at the ways that modern scientific thinking has constructed oppositional dualities such as objectivity/subjectivity, human/machine, nature/science, and male/female, and how these have constrained who can engage in science/technology and how (...)
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  33.  98
    Science, responsibility, and the philosophical imagination.Matthew Sample - 2022 - Synthese 200 (2):1-19.
    If we cannot define science using only analysis or description, then we must rely on imagination to provide us with suitable objects of philosophical inquiry. This process ties our intellectual findings to the particular ways in which we philosophers think about scientific practice and carve out a cognitive space between real world practice and conceptual abstraction. As an example, I consider Heather Douglas’s work on the responsibilities of scientists and document her implicit ideal of science, defined primarily as an epistemic (...)
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  34.  42
    The Virtual Speculum in the New World Order1.Donna J. Haraway - 1997 - Feminist Review 55 (1):22-72.
    Beginning by reading a 1992 feminist appropriation of Michelangelo's Creation of Adam – in a cartoon in which the finger of a nude Adamic woman touches a computer keyboard, while the god-like VDT screen shows a disembodied fetus – ‘Virtual Speculum’ argues for a broader conception of ‘new reproductive technologies’ in order to foreground justice and freedom projects for differently situated women in the New World Order. Broadly conceptualized reproductive practices must be central to social theory in general, and (...)
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  35.  14
    Mooncalf: ‘Unclean meat’.WhiteFeather Hunter - 2020 - Technoetic Arts 18 (2):205-222.
    The calamitous warnings of climate science have been latched onto by a growing roster of biotech start-up companies who propose to invent lab-generated meat alternatives to the ecologically disastrous livestock industry. They use solutionist hype to promote ‘sustainable’, ‘eco-friendly’, ‘cruelty-free’, ‘clean meat’. This moralized marketing, however, masks a continued reliance on animal agriculture. The fact remains that mammalian cells and tissues are grown in vitro using foetal calf serum, a blood-derived nutrient. Is it really possible to grow meat without banking (...)
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  36. The Distribution of Emotions: Affective Politics of Emancipation.Brigitte Bargetz - 2015 - Hypatia 30 (3):580-596.
    Currently, affect and emotions are a widely discussed political topic. At least since the early 1990s, different disciplines—from the social sciences and humanities to science and technoscience—have increasingly engaged in studying and conceptualizing affect, emotion, feeling, and sensation, evoking yet another turn that is frequently framed as the “affective turn.” Within queer feminist affect theory, two positions have emerged: following Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick's well-known critique, there are either more “paranoid” or more “reparative” approaches toward affect. Whereas the latter (...)
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  37.  15
    The Reproductive Bodies of Postgenomics.Jaya Keaney & Sonja van Wichelen - 2022 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 47 (6):1111-1130.
    In this Introduction, we present a collection of articles under the topic “the reproductive bodies of postgenomics.” Through individual and collective research, the articles explore—sociologically, ethnographically, and philosophically—how bioscience in the postgenomic age is changing our understanding of reproductive bodies, and more broadly, how it is challenging existing ideas of heredity, embodiment, kinship, and identity. Feminist and postcolonial theories of technoscience are at the heart of this collection, and our aim is to further biosocial thinking while being cognizant (...)
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  38.  21
    Forensic evidence: Materializing bodies, materializing crimes.Corinna Kruse - 2010 - European Journal of Women's Studies 17 (4):363-377.
    Based on an ethnographic study of fingerprint and DNA evidence practices in the Swedish judicial system, this article analyses the materialization of forensic evidence. It argues that forensic evidence, while popularly understood as firmly rooted in materiality, is inseparably technoscientific and cultural. Its roots in the material world are entangled threads of matter, technoscience and culture that produce particular bodily constellations within and together with a particular sociocultural context. Forensic evidence, it argues further, is co-materialized with crimes as well (...)
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  39.  16
    Трансгресія і пошуки ідентичності в контексті гендерної проблематики і кіберфемінізму.Svitlana M. Povtoreva & Oksana Yu Chursinova - 2020 - Вісник Харківського Національного Університету Імені В. Н. Каразіна. Серія «Філософія. Філософські Перипетії» 62:33-46.
    The article considers the features of gender researches in the context of significant changes taking place in the technical and technological sphere of modern society. The authors considered it their task to trace the evolution of the gender issue starting with the actual ignoring of scientific and technological progress realities in early feminism to the natural synthesis of this issue with the achievements of technoscience and information technology. The most modern form of such a synthesis was cyberfeminism. The authors (...)
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  40.  27
    Ubiquitous photography.Sarah Kember - 2012 - Philosophy of Photography 3 (2):331-348.
    What is ubiquitous photography? The article addresses this question and argues that ubiquity signals something more than the proliferation and dispersal of photography into everyday life. Moving beyond the question of digitization and of new or digital media, the premise of the argument is that ubiquitous photography is inseparable from the claims and innovations associated with the wider field of ubiquitous computing. Here, photography and the photographic are realigned within the terms of the technoscience industries and their quest to (...)
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  41.  8
    Negotiating Conception: Lesbians' Hybrid-Technological Practices.Laura Mamo - 2007 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 32 (3):369-393.
    Drawing on in-depth interviews with thirty-six lesbians, this article offers a feminist qualitative analysis of lesbian conception practices. The article examines the ways lesbian actors negotiate biomedical discourse in ways that reveal the co-constitutiveness of nature and culture, bodies and technologies, and biomedical and subjective knowledge. The article offers the concept of hybrid technologies, which are described as lesbian pragmatic negotiations of shifting control loci of technoscience. The author argues that lesbians' pathways to pregnancy are characterized by a (...)
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  42.  32
    Careful Speculations: Toward a Caring Science of Forensic Genetics in Colombia.María Fernanda Olarte-Sierra & Tania Pérez-Bustos - 2020 - Feminist Studies 46 (1):158-177.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:158 Feminist Studies 46, no. 1. © 2020 by Feminist Studies, Inc. María Fernanda Olarte-Sierra and Tania Pérez-Bustos Careful Speculations: Toward a Caring Science of Forensic Genetics in Colombia Feminist Science and Technology Studies (STS) has recently opened up the question of care as a set of practices related to the sustainability of life.1 The field of feminist studies more broadly has extensively 1. This (...)
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  43.  21
    Cyberpsychology.Ian Parker & Ángel J. Gordo-López (eds.) - 1999 - New York: Routledge.
    On a basic level, "cyberpsychology" refers to the comparison of the mind with different kinds of machines. This multidisciplinary collection brings together essays by leading psychologists and cultural theorists working in the spheres of technology and psychology to explore links between popular culture, technoscience, feminism and politics. Tracing historical and contemporary lines of argument around the fascination between different forms of psychological and machine culture, contributors articulate "cyberpsychological" reflections on contemporary crises in psychology with emerging technologies of the self. (...)
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  44.  29
    Bacon’s Anthropocene.Pietro Daniel Omodeo - 2021 - Epistemology and Philosophy of Science 58 (3):149-170.
    The current predicament, marked by an unprecedented environmental crisis and novel debates on the anthropic-technological transformation of the earth-system, calls for a reassessment of the historical-epistemological question of the entanglement between power, knowledge, and nature. Francis Bacon is the classical reference point for this thematic cluster – a focal point for both historical reconstructions and epistemological reflections, for both those who extol the merits of scientific progress and those who criticize the risks posed by its abuse. I begin this essay (...)
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  45.  13
    Pat Cadigan's Synners: Refiguring Nature, Science and Technology.Laura Chernaik - 1997 - Feminist Review 56 (1):61-84.
    This article analyses an anti-essentialist SF novel, focusing on the extent to which anti-foundationalism enables a more accurate as well as a more productive representation of postmodernity. My argument stresses the ways in which Pat Cadigan's novel Synners, mostly because of its remarkable narrative form, challenges some of the most dangerous norms and normativity of American thought and culture. I argue, that, in order to understand this complex novel correctly, we must approach technoscience and transnational capitalism as separate, interacting (...)
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  46. Feminist Ethics and the Politics of Love: Feminist Review Issue 60.The Feminist Review Collective (ed.) - 1998 - Routledge.
    First published in 1998. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
     
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  47. A Black Feminist Statement.Black Feminism - 1995 - In Beverly Guy-Sheftal (ed.), Words of Fire: An Anthology of African American Feminist Thought. The New Press.
  48. Bolatito A. lanre-abass.A. Feminist - 2005 - In R. A. Akanmidu (ed.), Footprints in philosophy. Ibadan, Nigeria: Hope Publications. pp. 64.
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  49. Nancy Fraser and Linda J. Nicholson.Postmodern Feminism - 2006 - In Elizabeth Hackett & Sally Anne Haslanger (eds.), Theorizing feminisms: a reader. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 340.
     
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  50. Helen Reece.Feminist Anti-Violence Discourse - 2009 - In Shelley Day Sclater (ed.), Regulating autonomy: sex, reproduction and family. Portland, Or.: Hart.
     
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