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NAKED IN THE FACE OF CONTAMINATION While chemicals are often described and acted upon in technoscientific forums as isolated, discrete entities, vernacular experience points to possibilities of experiencing, speaking about, and imagining chemical exposures that have otherwise been rendered politically obsolete. Drawing from ethnographic fieldwork in the Ecuadorian Amazon, this article invokes accounts of daily life in order to VIEW OF CRIP KIN, MANIFESTING Crip Kin, Manifesting. Alison Kafer. University of Texas, Austin. alison.kafer@austin.utexas.edu. In Gloves for All, three rows of gloves hang across a gallery wall, and visitors are encouraged to try on the ones that most closely match their own hands. Although the gloves are all made of the same white fabric, they differ in size andshape.
THINKING THE FEMINIST VEGETAL TURN IN THE SHADOW OF This is an interview with Catriona Sandilands, an environmental literary critic and ecocultural scholar whose work brings together questions of ecology, gender and sexuality, and multispecies biopolitics. She coined the term queer ecologies to describe and intervene in the manifold intersections running between sexuality, nature, and power in contemporary ecological conversations. CATALYST: FEMINISM, THEORY, TECHNOSCIENCE Announcements. Catalyst Anniversary Event – April 22nd. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience is turning 5! Join the anniversary event - Thursday April 22 nd This year Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience will celebrate its 5th anniversary. In honor of this milestone, members of the editorial board have organized what promises to be a thought-provoking and festive event: CYBORGS UNBOUND: FEMINIST STS, INTERDISCIPLINARITY, AND This Lab Meeting took place as a roundtable titled Cyborg Manifestations. Hosted at MIT in February 2020, it was part of the Boston-area Consortium for Graduate Studies in Gender, Culture, Women, and Sexuality’s (GCWS) series Feminisms Unbound. The introduction maps the history and structure of the GCWS series and highlights how its rigorous commitment to interdisciplinary graduate COALITION-MAKING AND THE PRACTICE OF FEMINIST STS IN THE Fitsch, Hannah, Jordan-Young, Rebecca, Kaiser, Anelis, Kraus, Cynthia, Roy, Deboleena,& Schmitz, Sigrid (2020). Life, Coalition, and the Practice of Feminist Science TROUBLING FIGURES: ENDOCRINE DISRUPTORS, INTERSEX FROGS Special Section: Chemical Entanglements 2 | Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience Issue 6 (Vol 1) Logan Natalie O’Laughlin, 2020 TRANSMITTING INSULIN: THE DESIGN, LOOK, AND PERFORMANCE OF Rentschler, Carrie, and Benjamin Nothwehr. 2021. “Transmitting Insulin: The Design, Look, and Performance of Insulin Delivery Devices as Communication Technologies.” “ALEXA, TELL ME ABOUT YOUR MOTHER”: THE HISTORY OF THE Lingel, Jessa, & Crawford, Kate. ( X Z X). “Alexa, tell me about your mother”: The history of the secretary and the end of secrecy. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory VIEW OF DISTURBING BEHAVIOURS: OLE IVAR LOVAAS AND THE Needless to say, this post created considerable controversy, with vehement supporters and challengers. This paper interrogates the interwoven "root" of the therapies that Sequenzia describes as seen in the overlapping approaches to changing the behaviors of "autistic" and "gender-disturbed" children in the work of UCLA psychologist Ole IvarLovaas.
NAKED IN THE FACE OF CONTAMINATION While chemicals are often described and acted upon in technoscientific forums as isolated, discrete entities, vernacular experience points to possibilities of experiencing, speaking about, and imagining chemical exposures that have otherwise been rendered politically obsolete. Drawing from ethnographic fieldwork in the Ecuadorian Amazon, this article invokes accounts of daily life in order to VIEW OF CRIP KIN, MANIFESTING Crip Kin, Manifesting. Alison Kafer. University of Texas, Austin. alison.kafer@austin.utexas.edu. In Gloves for All, three rows of gloves hang across a gallery wall, and visitors are encouraged to try on the ones that most closely match their own hands. Although the gloves are all made of the same white fabric, they differ in size andshape.
THINKING THE FEMINIST VEGETAL TURN IN THE SHADOW OF This is an interview with Catriona Sandilands, an environmental literary critic and ecocultural scholar whose work brings together questions of ecology, gender and sexuality, and multispecies biopolitics. She coined the term queer ecologies to describe and intervene in the manifold intersections running between sexuality, nature, and power in contemporary ecological conversations. CATALYST: FEMINISM, THEORY, TECHNOSCIENCE Announcements. Catalyst Anniversary Event – April 22nd. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience is turning 5! Join the anniversary event - Thursday April 22 nd This year Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience will celebrate its 5th anniversary. In honor of this milestone, members of the editorial board have organized what promises to be a thought-provoking and festive event: ECTOGENESIS IS FOR FEMINISTS: RECLAIMING ARTIFICIAL WOMBS Horn, Claire. (2020). Ectogenesis is for feminists: Reclaiming artificial wombs from anti-abortion discourse. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience, 6(1), page 1-15. TRANSMITTING INSULIN: THE DESIGN, LOOK, AND PERFORMANCE OF Rentschler, Carrie, and Benjamin Nothwehr. 2021. “Transmitting Insulin: The Design, Look, and Performance of Insulin Delivery Devices as Communication Technologies.” HORMONAL ADVANTAGE: RETRACING EXPLOITATIVE HISTORIES OF Technologies and self-help protocols associated with menstrual tracking have gained popularity over the past decade, with wellness consultants such as Alisa Vitti at the helm. Through careful monitoring and lifestyle changes, such techniques promise to unleash an inherent hormonal advantage that can extend one’s personal and professional pursuits. NAKED IN THE FACE OF CONTAMINATION While chemicals are often described and acted upon in technoscientific forums as isolated, discrete entities, vernacular experience points to possibilities of experiencing, speaking about, and imagining chemical exposures that have otherwise been rendered politically obsolete. Drawing from ethnographic fieldwork in the Ecuadorian Amazon, this article invokes accounts of daily life in order to VIEW OF CRIP KIN, MANIFESTING ARTICLE Crip Kin, Manifesting Alison Kafer University of Texas, Austin alison.kafer@austin.utexas.edu In Gloves for All, three rows of gloves hang across a gallery wall, and visitors are encouraged to try on the ones that most closely match their own hands. Although the gloves are all made of the same white fabric, they differ in size and shape. CRIP TECHNOSCIENCE MANIFESTO Announcements. Catalyst Anniversary Event – April 22nd. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience is turning 5! Join the anniversary event - Thursday April 22 nd This year Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience will celebrate its 5th anniversary. In honor of this milestone, members of the editorial board have organized what promises to be a thought-provoking and festive event: THINKING THE FEMINIST VEGETAL TURN IN THE SHADOW OF This is an interview with Catriona Sandilands, an environmental literary critic and ecocultural scholar whose work brings together questions of ecology, gender and sexuality, and multispecies biopolitics. She coined the term queer ecologies to describe and intervene in the manifold intersections running between sexuality, nature, and power in contemporary ecological conversations. DISTURBING BEHAVIOURS: OLE IVAR LOVAAS AND THE QUEER This paper “queers” the history of autism science through an examination of the overlap between the regulation of autism with that of gender and sexuality in the work of Ole Ivar Lovaas. Lovaas is the founder of Applied Behaviour Analysis (ABA), the most commonly used and funded autism intervention today that seeks to extinguish autistic behaviors, primarily among children. VIEW OF RACIAL FICTIONS, BIOLOGICAL FACTS: EXPANDING THE Building upon this insight, the following narrative sketch is an experiment to know things differently, a way to reflect anew upon the themes of my research—innovation, inequity, biotechnology, and race among them—and, ultimately, to explore the relationship between racial fictions and biological facts. CYBORGS UNBOUND: FEMINIST STS, INTERDISCIPLINARITY, AND This Lab Meeting took place as a roundtable titled Cyborg Manifestations. Hosted at MIT in February 2020, it was part of the Boston-area Consortium for Graduate Studies in Gender, Culture, Women, and Sexuality’s (GCWS) series Feminisms Unbound. The introduction maps the history and structure of the GCWS series and highlights how its rigorous commitment to interdisciplinary graduate TROUBLING FIGURES: ENDOCRINE DISRUPTORS, INTERSEX FROGS Special Section: Chemical Entanglements 2 | Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience Issue 6 (Vol 1) Logan Natalie O’Laughlin, 2020 ECTOGENESIS IS FOR FEMINISTS: RECLAIMING ARTIFICIAL WOMBS Horn, Claire. (2020). Ectogenesis is for feminists: Reclaiming artificial wombs from anti-abortion discourse. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience, 6(1), page 1-15. TRANSMITTING INSULIN: THE DESIGN, LOOK, AND PERFORMANCE OF Rentschler, Carrie, and Benjamin Nothwehr. 2021. “Transmitting Insulin: The Design, Look, and Performance of Insulin Delivery Devices as Communication Technologies.” VIEW OF DISTURBING BEHAVIOURS: OLE IVAR LOVAAS AND THE Needless to say, this post created considerable controversy, with vehement supporters and challengers. This paper interrogates the interwoven "root" of the therapies that Sequenzia describes as seen in the overlapping approaches to changing the behaviors of "autistic" and "gender-disturbed" children in the work of UCLA psychologist Ole IvarLovaas.
“ALEXA, TELL ME ABOUT YOUR MOTHER”: THE HISTORY OF THE Lingel, Jessa, & Crawford, Kate. ( X Z X). “Alexa, tell me about your mother”: The history of the secretary and the end of secrecy. Catalyst: Feminism, TheoryTROUBLING FIGURES
This essay examines the figure of the pesticide-exposed intersex frog, a canary in the coal mine for public endocrinological health. Through feminist science studies and critical discourse analysis, I explore the fields that bring this figure into being (endocrinology, toxicology, and pest science) and the colonial and racial logics thatshape these fields.
A DRONE MANIFESTO: RE-FORMING THE PARTIAL POLITICS OF Debates about today’s unmanned systems explain their operation using binary distinctions to delimit “us” and “them,” “here” and “there,” and “human” and “machine.” Yet the networked actions of drone aircraft persistently undo these oppositions. I show that unmanned systems are dissociative, not dualistic. I turn to Haraway’s “A Cyborg Manifesto” (1991) to “DESIGN THINKING”: DEFENDING SILICON VALLEY AT THE APEX OF This paper examines the emergence of “design thinking” as a form of technical expertise. It demonstrates that “design thinking” articulates a racialized understanding of labor, judgment, and the subject and attempts to maintain whiteness at the apex of global hierarchies of labor.“Design thinking” is a form of expertise that poses design not as form giving, but as a form of NAKED IN THE FACE OF CONTAMINATION While chemicals are often described and acted upon in technoscientific forums as isolated, discrete entities, vernacular experience points to possibilities of experiencing, speaking about, and imagining chemical exposures that have otherwise been rendered politically obsolete. Drawing from ethnographic fieldwork in the Ecuadorian Amazon, this article invokes accounts of daily life in order to CYBORGS UNBOUND: FEMINIST STS, INTERDISCIPLINARITY, AND This Lab Meeting took place as a roundtable titled Cyborg Manifestations. Hosted at MIT in February 2020, it was part of the Boston-area Consortium for Graduate Studies in Gender, Culture, Women, and Sexuality’s (GCWS) series Feminisms Unbound. The introduction maps the history and structure of the GCWS series and highlights how its rigorous commitment to interdisciplinary graduate TROUBLING FIGURES: ENDOCRINE DISRUPTORS, INTERSEX FROGS Special Section: Chemical Entanglements 2 | Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience Issue 6 (Vol 1) Logan Natalie O’Laughlin, 2020 ECTOGENESIS IS FOR FEMINISTS: RECLAIMING ARTIFICIAL WOMBS Horn, Claire. (2020). Ectogenesis is for feminists: Reclaiming artificial wombs from anti-abortion discourse. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience, 6(1), page 1-15. TRANSMITTING INSULIN: THE DESIGN, LOOK, AND PERFORMANCE OF Rentschler, Carrie, and Benjamin Nothwehr. 2021. “Transmitting Insulin: The Design, Look, and Performance of Insulin Delivery Devices as Communication Technologies.” VIEW OF DISTURBING BEHAVIOURS: OLE IVAR LOVAAS AND THE Needless to say, this post created considerable controversy, with vehement supporters and challengers. This paper interrogates the interwoven "root" of the therapies that Sequenzia describes as seen in the overlapping approaches to changing the behaviors of "autistic" and "gender-disturbed" children in the work of UCLA psychologist Ole IvarLovaas.
“ALEXA, TELL ME ABOUT YOUR MOTHER”: THE HISTORY OF THE Lingel, Jessa, & Crawford, Kate. ( X Z X). “Alexa, tell me about your mother”: The history of the secretary and the end of secrecy. Catalyst: Feminism, TheoryTROUBLING FIGURES
This essay examines the figure of the pesticide-exposed intersex frog, a canary in the coal mine for public endocrinological health. Through feminist science studies and critical discourse analysis, I explore the fields that bring this figure into being (endocrinology, toxicology, and pest science) and the colonial and racial logics thatshape these fields.
A DRONE MANIFESTO: RE-FORMING THE PARTIAL POLITICS OF Debates about today’s unmanned systems explain their operation using binary distinctions to delimit “us” and “them,” “here” and “there,” and “human” and “machine.” Yet the networked actions of drone aircraft persistently undo these oppositions. I show that unmanned systems are dissociative, not dualistic. I turn to Haraway’s “A Cyborg Manifesto” (1991) to “DESIGN THINKING”: DEFENDING SILICON VALLEY AT THE APEX OF This paper examines the emergence of “design thinking” as a form of technical expertise. It demonstrates that “design thinking” articulates a racialized understanding of labor, judgment, and the subject and attempts to maintain whiteness at the apex of global hierarchies of labor.“Design thinking” is a form of expertise that poses design not as form giving, but as a form of NAKED IN THE FACE OF CONTAMINATION While chemicals are often described and acted upon in technoscientific forums as isolated, discrete entities, vernacular experience points to possibilities of experiencing, speaking about, and imagining chemical exposures that have otherwise been rendered politically obsolete. Drawing from ethnographic fieldwork in the Ecuadorian Amazon, this article invokes accounts of daily life in order to CATALYST: FEMINISM, THEORY, TECHNOSCIENCE Announcements. Catalyst Anniversary Event – April 22nd. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience is turning 5! Join the anniversary event - Thursday April 22 nd This year Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience will celebrate its 5th anniversary. In honor of this milestone, members of the editorial board have organized what promises to be a thought-provoking and festive event: CYBORGS UNBOUND: FEMINIST STS, INTERDISCIPLINARITY, AND This Lab Meeting took place as a roundtable titled Cyborg Manifestations. Hosted at MIT in February 2020, it was part of the Boston-area Consortium for Graduate Studies in Gender, Culture, Women, and Sexuality’s (GCWS) series Feminisms Unbound. The introduction maps the history and structure of the GCWS series and highlights how its rigorous commitment to interdisciplinary graduateTROUBLING FIGURES
This essay examines the figure of the pesticide-exposed intersex frog, a canary in the coal mine for public endocrinological health. Through feminist science studies and critical discourse analysis, I explore the fields that bring this figure into being (endocrinology, toxicology, and pest science) and the colonial and racial logics thatshape these fields.
TRANSMITTING INSULIN: THE DESIGN, LOOK, AND PERFORMANCE OF Rentschler, Carrie, and Benjamin Nothwehr. 2021. “Transmitting Insulin: The Design, Look, and Performance of Insulin Delivery Devices as Communication Technologies.” NAKED IN THE FACE OF CONTAMINATION While chemicals are often described and acted upon in technoscientific forums as isolated, discrete entities, vernacular experience points to possibilities of experiencing, speaking about, and imagining chemical exposures that have otherwise been rendered politically obsolete. Drawing from ethnographic fieldwork in the Ecuadorian Amazon, this article invokes accounts of daily life in order to ALEXA, TELL ME ABOUT YOUR MOTHER” Over the last five years, we have seen the rise of a new generation of ‘soft AI’ digital assistants like Apple’s Siri, Microsoft’s Cortana, and Amazon’s Alexa, all designed with feminized personas. In this paper, we connect these AI assistants to the long history of the secretary, beginning with secretary as a desk and then as a profession, emblematized by the executive assistant VIEW OF CRIP KIN, MANIFESTING ARTICLE Crip Kin, Manifesting Alison Kafer University of Texas, Austin alison.kafer@austin.utexas.edu In Gloves for All, three rows of gloves hang across a gallery wall, and visitors are encouraged to try on the ones that most closely match their own hands. Although the gloves are all made of the same white fabric, they differ in size and shape. CRIP TECHNOSCIENCE MANIFESTO Announcements. Catalyst Anniversary Event – April 22nd. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience is turning 5! Join the anniversary event - Thursday April 22 nd This year Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience will celebrate its 5th anniversary. In honor of this milestone, members of the editorial board have organized what promises to be a thought-provoking and festive event: VIEW OF STAGING BODIES, PERFORMING RAMPS Access, Performing, Stages Named by Sara Hendren (n.d.) as one of Galileo’s simple machines (the inclined plane), the ramp is an overlooked technology now often dedicated to facilitating the transition between one level and the next without the use of a step. THE CYCLIC SELF: MENSTRUAL CYCLE TRACKING AS BODY POLITICS Special Section: Self-Tracking, Embodied Differences, and the Politics and Ethics of Health 2 | Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience 7 (1) Laetitia Della Bianca, 2021 CATALYST: FEMINISM, THEORY, TECHNOSCIENCE Announcements. Catalyst Anniversary Event – April 22nd. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience is turning 5! Join the anniversary event - Thursday April 22 nd This year Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience will celebrate its 5th anniversary. In honor of this milestone, members of the editorial board have organized what promises to be a thought-provoking and festive event: CYBORGS UNBOUND: FEMINIST STS, INTERDISCIPLINARITY, AND This Lab Meeting took place as a roundtable titled Cyborg Manifestations. Hosted at MIT in February 2020, it was part of the Boston-area Consortium for Graduate Studies in Gender, Culture, Women, and Sexuality’s (GCWS) series Feminisms Unbound. The introduction maps the history and structure of the GCWS series and highlights how its rigorous commitment to interdisciplinary graduate TROUBLING FIGURES: ENDOCRINE DISRUPTORS, INTERSEX FROGS Special Section: Chemical Entanglements 2 | Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience Issue 6 (Vol 1) Logan Natalie O’Laughlin, 2020 THE MATTERING OF BLACK LIVES: OCTAVIA BUTLER’S This article argues that the ethical potential of “the nonhuman turn” advanced by the new materialisms is structured by disavowed social fantasies about black female flesh. The most recent new materialist publications draw upon the techno-scientific developments of the Anthropocene, a geological epoch defined by the cumulative effects of species-level human activity, to demonstrate the “ALEXA, TELL ME ABOUT YOUR MOTHER”: THE HISTORY OF THE Lingel, Jessa, & Crawford, Kate. ( X Z X). “Alexa, tell me about your mother”: The history of the secretary and the end of secrecy. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory ALEXA, TELL ME ABOUT YOUR MOTHER” Over the last five years, we have seen the rise of a new generation of ‘soft AI’ digital assistants like Apple’s Siri, Microsoft’s Cortana, and Amazon’s Alexa, all designed with feminized personas. In this paper, we connect these AI assistants to the long history of the secretary, beginning with secretary as a desk and then as a profession, emblematized by the executive assistantTROUBLING FIGURES
This essay examines the figure of the pesticide-exposed intersex frog, a canary in the coal mine for public endocrinological health. Through feminist science studies and critical discourse analysis, I explore the fields that bring this figure into being (endocrinology, toxicology, and pest science) and the colonial and racial logics thatshape these fields.
THINKING THE FEMINIST VEGETAL TURN IN THE SHADOW OF This is an interview with Catriona Sandilands, an environmental literary critic and ecocultural scholar whose work brings together questions of ecology, gender and sexuality, and multispecies biopolitics. She coined the term queer ecologies to describe and intervene in the manifold intersections running between sexuality, nature, and power in contemporary ecological conversations. ENGAGEMENTS WITH DECOLONIZATION AND DECOLONIALITY IN AND Message from Catalyst Editorial Board. As one of the very few peer-review feminist journals dedicated to incorporating approaches from critical public health, disability studies, sci-art, technology and digital media studies, history and philosophy of science and medicine, and more, we are in the fortunate but also the challenging position of receiving increasing numbers of special section VIEW OF DISTURBING BEHAVIOURS: OLE IVAR LOVAAS AND THEIVAR LOVAAS ABADR O IVAR LOVAASIVAR LOVAAS QUOTEIVAR LOVAAS STUDYO IVARLOVAASLOVAAS AUTISM
Needless to say, this post created considerable controversy, with vehement supporters and challengers. This paper interrogates the interwoven "root" of the therapies that Sequenzia describes as seen in the overlapping approaches to changing the behaviors of "autistic" and "gender-disturbed" children in the work of UCLA psychologist Ole IvarLovaas.
CATALYST: FEMINISM, THEORY, TECHNOSCIENCE Announcements. Catalyst Anniversary Event – April 22nd. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience is turning 5! Join the anniversary event - Thursday April 22 nd This year Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience will celebrate its 5th anniversary. In honor of this milestone, members of the editorial board have organized what promises to be a thought-provoking and festive event: CYBORGS UNBOUND: FEMINIST STS, INTERDISCIPLINARITY, AND This Lab Meeting took place as a roundtable titled Cyborg Manifestations. Hosted at MIT in February 2020, it was part of the Boston-area Consortium for Graduate Studies in Gender, Culture, Women, and Sexuality’s (GCWS) series Feminisms Unbound. The introduction maps the history and structure of the GCWS series and highlights how its rigorous commitment to interdisciplinary graduate TROUBLING FIGURES: ENDOCRINE DISRUPTORS, INTERSEX FROGS Special Section: Chemical Entanglements 2 | Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience Issue 6 (Vol 1) Logan Natalie O’Laughlin, 2020 “ALEXA, TELL ME ABOUT YOUR MOTHER”: THE HISTORY OF THE Lingel, Jessa, & Crawford, Kate. ( X Z X). “Alexa, tell me about your mother”: The history of the secretary and the end of secrecy. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory ALEXA, TELL ME ABOUT YOUR MOTHER” Over the last five years, we have seen the rise of a new generation of ‘soft AI’ digital assistants like Apple’s Siri, Microsoft’s Cortana, and Amazon’s Alexa, all designed with feminized personas. In this paper, we connect these AI assistants to the long history of the secretary, beginning with secretary as a desk and then as a profession, emblematized by the executive assistantTROUBLING FIGURES
This essay examines the figure of the pesticide-exposed intersex frog, a canary in the coal mine for public endocrinological health. Through feminist science studies and critical discourse analysis, I explore the fields that bring this figure into being (endocrinology, toxicology, and pest science) and the colonial and racial logics thatshape these fields.
THINKING THE FEMINIST VEGETAL TURN IN THE SHADOW OF This is an interview with Catriona Sandilands, an environmental literary critic and ecocultural scholar whose work brings together questions of ecology, gender and sexuality, and multispecies biopolitics. She coined the term queer ecologies to describe and intervene in the manifold intersections running between sexuality, nature, and power in contemporary ecological conversations. ENGAGEMENTS WITH DECOLONIZATION AND DECOLONIALITY IN AND Message from Catalyst Editorial Board. As one of the very few peer-review feminist journals dedicated to incorporating approaches from critical public health, disability studies, sci-art, technology and digital media studies, history and philosophy of science and medicine, and more, we are in the fortunate but also the challenging position of receiving increasing numbers of special section THE MATTERING OF BLACK LIVES: OCTAVIA BUTLER’S This article argues that the ethical potential of “the nonhuman turn” advanced by the new materialisms is structured by disavowed social fantasies about black female flesh. The most recent new materialist publications draw upon the techno-scientific developments of the Anthropocene, a geological epoch defined by the cumulative effects of species-level human activity, to demonstrate the VIEW OF DISTURBING BEHAVIOURS: OLE IVAR LOVAAS AND THEIVAR LOVAAS ABADR O IVAR LOVAASIVAR LOVAAS QUOTEIVAR LOVAAS STUDYO IVARLOVAASLOVAAS AUTISM
Needless to say, this post created considerable controversy, with vehement supporters and challengers. This paper interrogates the interwoven "root" of the therapies that Sequenzia describes as seen in the overlapping approaches to changing the behaviors of "autistic" and "gender-disturbed" children in the work of UCLA psychologist Ole IvarLovaas.
ABOUT THE JOURNAL
Journal History. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed online journal designed to serve the expanding interdisciplinary field of feminist science and technology studies (STS). Now five years into publication, the journal has becomean
REGISTER | CATALYST: FEMINISM, THEORY, TECHNOSCIENCE Announcements. Catalyst Anniversary Event – April 22nd. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience is turning 5! Join the anniversary event - Thursday April 22 nd This year Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience will celebrate its 5th anniversary. In honor of this milestone, members of the editorial board have organized what promises to be a thought-provoking and festive event:TROUBLING FIGURES
This essay examines the figure of the pesticide-exposed intersex frog, a canary in the coal mine for public endocrinological health. Through feminist science studies and critical discourse analysis, I explore the fields that bring this figure into being (endocrinology, toxicology, and pest science) and the colonial and racial logics thatshape these fields.
ALEXA, TELL ME ABOUT YOUR MOTHER” Over the last five years, we have seen the rise of a new generation of ‘soft AI’ digital assistants like Apple’s Siri, Microsoft’s Cortana, and Amazon’s Alexa, all designed with feminized personas. In this paper, we connect these AI assistants to the long history of the secretary, beginning with secretary as a desk and then as a profession, emblematized by the executive assistant THINKING THE FEMINIST VEGETAL TURN IN THE SHADOW OF This is an interview with Catriona Sandilands, an environmental literary critic and ecocultural scholar whose work brings together questions of ecology, gender and sexuality, and multispecies biopolitics. She coined the term queer ecologies to describe and intervene in the manifold intersections running between sexuality, nature, and power in contemporary ecological conversations. TRANSMITTING INSULIN: THE DESIGN, LOOK, AND PERFORMANCE OF Rentschler, Carrie, and Benjamin Nothwehr. 2021. “Transmitting Insulin: The Design, Look, and Performance of Insulin Delivery Devices as Communication Technologies.” CRIP TECHNOSCIENCE MANIFESTO Announcements. Catalyst Anniversary Event – April 22nd. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience is turning 5! Join the anniversary event - Thursday April 22 nd This year Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience will celebrate its 5th anniversary. In honor of this milestone, members of the editorial board have organized what promises to be a thought-provoking and festive event: MISOGYNOIR IN MEDICAL MEDIA: ON CASTER SEMENYA AND R Misogynoir describes the co-constitutive, anti-Black, and misogynistic racism directed at Black women, particularly in visual and digital culture (Bailey, 2010). The term is a combination of misogyny, the hatred of women, and noir, which means black but also carries film and media connotations. It is the particular amalgamation of anti-Black racism and misogyny in popular mediaSCIENCE & JUSTICE
Science & Justice began with the formation of the Science & Justice Working Group (SJWG) in the Fall of 2006. To begin with, the group consisted of a small group of graduate students, research staff, and faculty. Since then it has become a bi-weekly meeting that regularly gathers around 30-40 faculty, research staff, graduate students, and VIEW OF ARTICULATING BLACK FEMINIST HEALTH SCIENCE STUDIES utilizes a practice that centers the well-being of those working within it. To that end, we commit to a new sustainable productivity—a productivity that does not involve the sacrifice of the self—specifically one’s health, which normative knowledge production in academia demands. Quick jump to page content* Main Navigation
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
CATALYST ANNIVERSARY EVENT - APRIL 22ND2021-04-06
_Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience is turning 5! _Join the anniversary event - Thursday April 22ndCURRENT ISSUE
Vol 7 No 1 (2021): Special Section: Self-Tracking, Embodied Differences, and the Politics and Ethics of Health 7(1) Special Section: Self-Tracking, Embodied Differences, and the Politics and Ethics of Health*
The cover image, _Growing Una and Cosmo_, by Gemma Anderson, depicts the breastfeeding pattern of the artist’s baby twins during the first month of their lives. For more about her work, please visit www.gemma-anderson.co.uk.
PUBLISHED: 2021-04-20 SELF-TRACKING, EMBODIED DIFFERENCES, AND THE POLITICS AND ETHICS OFHEALTH
INTRODUCTION: SELF-TRACKING, EMBODIED DIFFERENCES, ANDINTERSECTIONALITY
Luna Dolezal, Venla OikkonenHTML
MENTAL HEALTH AND THE SELF-TRACKING STUDENTLindsay Weinberg
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DIGITAL SELF-MONITORING, BODIED REALITIES: RE-CASTING APP-BASED TECHNOLOGIES IN FIRST EPISODE PSYCHOSIS Suze Berkhout, Juveria ZaheerHTML
TRACKING WORK FROM THE WRIST: THE SURVEILLANCE OF ETHIOPIAN WOMEN ATHLETES FOR CAPITALHannah Borenstein
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KEEPING FIT IN THE SMOG: HEALTH, SELF-TRACKING AND AIR POLLUTION IN POST-SOCIALIST CHINAXin Liu
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THE CYCLIC SELF: MENSTRUAL CYCLE TRACKING AS BODY POLITICS Laetitia Della BiancaHTML
INCIPIENT INFERTILITY: TRACKING EGGS AND OVULATION ACROSS THE LIFECOURSE
Celia Roberts, Catherine WaldbyHTML
HORMONAL ADVANTAGE: RETRACING EXPLOITATIVE HISTORIES OF WORKPLACEMENSTRUAL TRACKING
Sarah Fox, Franchesca SpektorHTML
FEMINIST SCIENCE INTERVENTIONS IN SELF-TRACKING TECHNOLOGYAlessandra Mularoni
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COMMENTARY
THE BODY, THE THRESHOLD, AND THE CUT: THE AESTHETICS AND THE ETHICS OF MEASURING IN INTERACTIVE MEDIA ARTHeidi Tikka
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LAB MEETING
CYBORGS UNBOUND: FEMINIST STS, INTERDISCIPLINARITY, AND GRADUATEEDUCATION
Kiran Asher, Mel Chen, Kareem Khubchandani, Eli Nelson, BanuSubramaniam
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ORIGINAL RESEARCH
TRANSMITTING INSULIN: THE DESIGN AND LOOK OF INSULIN DELIVERY DEVICES AS TECHNOLOGIES OF COMMUNICATION Carrie Rentschler, Benjamin NothwehrHTML
INTIMATE LABOR AT BIOMEDICAL FRONTLINES: SITUATED KNOWLEDGES OF FEMALE COMMUNITY HEALTH WORKERS IN THE MANAGEMENT OF COVID-19 IN INDIA Sanghamitra Das, Samhita DasHTML
BIO-ORIENTALISM AND THE YELLOW PERIL OF YELLOW LIFEQuinn Lester
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BOOK REVIEWS
BOOK REVIEW | DEADLY BIOCULTURES: THE ETHICS OF LIFE-MAKING, BY NADINE EHLERS AND SHILOH KRUPAR (UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA PRESS, 2019)Myriam Durocher
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BOOK REVIEW | DATA FEMINISM BY CATHERINE D’IGNAZIO AND LAUREN F. KLEIN (MIT PRESS, 2020)Becca Rose Glowacki
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BOOK REVIEW | BECOMING HUMAN: MATTER AND MEANING IN AN ANTIBLACK WORLD, BY ZAKIYYAH IMAN JACKSON (NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2020)A.E. Stevenson
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BOOK REVIEW | RESILIENT CYBORGS: LIVING AND DYING WITH PACEMAKERS AND DEFIBRILLATORS, BY NELLY OUDSHOORN (PALGRAVE MACMILLAN, 2020)Anne Pollock
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BOOK REVIEW | MOBILE SUBJECTS: TRANSNATIONAL IMAGINARIES OF GENDER REASSIGNMENT, BY AREN Z. AIZURA (DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2020)K.S. Shindle
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
CATALYST ANNIVERSARY EVENT – APRIL 22ND _Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience is turning 5! _Join the anniversary event - Thursday April 22nd This year _Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience_ will
celebrate its 5th anniversary. In honor of this milestone, members of the editorial board have organized what promises to be a thought-provoking and festive event: Foundations and Futures of Feminist TechnosciencesThursday April 22nd
3-6pm Atlanta / 8-11pm London DONNA HARAWAY AND BANU SUBRAMANIAM will kick off the event by reflecting on the foundational stories of feminist technoscience. How do we highlight the multiple and rich genealogies of the field that embodies anti-racist, decolonial, and multispecies feminist technosciences? Send your questions in advance for Donna and Banu to: banu@wost.umass.edu Next MOYA BAILEY, MAX LIBOIRON, TANIA PÉREZ-BUSTOS, AND THAO PHAN will ponder the question what feminist STS can mean and do going forward. What kind of futures can we—as an intellectual and transnational collective—anticipate and imagine? We conclude with a splash, plunging in REMOTE ACCESS: CRIP FEMINIST DANCE PARTY, a crip nightlife event organized and hosted by Aimi Hamraie and Kevin Gotkin and curated by the Critical Design Lab. Please find more information here,
and register for the event here.
Spread the word—and hope to see you all there! ------------------------- MESSAGE FROM _CATALYST _EDITORIAL BOARD As one of the very few peer-review feminist journals dedicated to incorporating approaches from critical public health, disability studies, sci-art, technology and digital media studies, history and philosophy of science and medicine, and more, we are in the fortunate but also the challenging position of receiving increasing numbers of special section proposals. With several special sections already in the pipeline, we are currently scheduled out to Spring 2023. In light of the timeliness of the feminist technoscience interventions that these special sections typically aim to achieve, the _Catalyst_ Editorial Board believes that adding more special sections to the pipeline at this point would be a disservice to the contributors and to the field. We encourage prospective special section editors to circulate your proposal to another journal. We will resume accepting special section proposals_ _in Fall 2021 and would be happy to consider your proposal at that time -------------------------IN SOLIDARITY
Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience stands in Solidarity with Black Lives Matter. More info > ------------------------- ANNOUNCING THE NEW ISSUE OF CATALYST Catalyst Fall 2020 issue (Vol. 6, No. 2) with a Special Section on Computing in/from the South is out now! More info > ------------------------- CFP: THE DOMESTICATION OF WAR _Guest Editors: __ Astrida Neimanis (University of Sydney), Diana Pardo Pedraza (George Washington University), Jennifer Terry (University of California, Irvine), and Xan Chacko (University ofQueensland) _
Scholarly work at the interface of anthropology, science and technology studies, and environmental humanities, particularly in their feminist articulations, has sought to bring attention the material legacies of warfare and militarized logics. We invite submissions to a _Catalyst_ special section, “The Domestication of War” to gather critically and theoretically engaged feminist interventions that study the latent and enduring violence of militarization which is so deeply rooted in the fabric and technologies of everyday life that it emerges effortlessly from objects, spaces,infrastructures, and scientific practices. “The Domestication of War,” focuses not only on the technologies and sciences that are often linked to waging war, nor is it reduced to the social and material effects of war and violence, particularly in ordinary, domestic and intimate spaces. It also addresses _how the home becomes a catalyst for militarism_. We seek contributions that will show how ordinary and domestic objects, technologies, spaces, infrastructures, and practices make violence feel at home in the world and, in doing so, aspires to totalize wartime. We are concerned about the domestic life of militarization as _oikos_; the household, habitat, and milieu of violent material relationships that are bothongoing and latent.
We want to engage multimodal conversations and experimental methodologies that explore, examine, and explode (de)militarized urban infrastructures and rural landscapes, are capable of detailing un/tangled textures, im/perceptible reverberations, in/toxicating smells, bitter/sweet flavors, dis/abling technologies, and the extra/ordinary imaginaries of war, militarization, and violence. DEADLINE (ABSTRACTS ONLY): February 15, 2021More info >
------------------------- CFP: METAPHOR AS MEANING AND METHOD IN TECHNOCULTURE _Guest editors: T.L. Cowan, Jas Rault & Lindsay LeBlanc (University ofToronto)_
Feminist, critical race, anti-colonial, trans- and queer scholarship has a long history of attention to the work of metaphors: to their concealing work, to their materially constitutional work, and to the generative, paradigm-shifting work of introducing new metaphors. Similarly, feminist STS has long done the work of challenging the binary opposition of “technology” and “culture.” In this special section, we want to include studies of metaphor that understand “technology and culture as a specific unity” (Balsamo, 2011, p. 5). We hope that “Metaphors as Meaning & Method in Technoculture” will offer feminist scholars of STS, the Social Sciences, Arts and Humanities, the opportunity to think together through and beyond our disciplines. DEADLINE (ABSTRACTS ONLY): October 1, 2020MORE INFO >
------------------------- A NEW LOOK FOR OUR JOURNAL With the release of the much-awaited Spring 2020 issue of _Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience_ we are very excited to present the design changes that we have brought about in the journal. The new design not only makes the articles more visually appealing but also improves accessibility across platforms to provide our readers with a better reading and viewing experience.READ MORE >
RECENT ISSUES
Vol 6 No 1 (2020):
Special Section on Chemical Entanglements: Gender and Exposure -------------------------Vol 5 No 2 (2018):
Special Section on Plantarium: Human–Vegetal Ecologies -------------------------Vol 5 No 1 (2019):
Special Section on Crip TechnoscienceEDITORIAL BOARD
Kimberly Juanita Brown, Mount Holyoke College Lisa Cartwright, UC San Diego Laura Foster, Indiana University Bloomington _(book reviewsco-editor)_
Nassim Parvin, Georgia Institute of Technology _(lead editor)_ Patrick Keilty, University of TorontoRachel Lee, UCLA
Mara Mills, New York University Michelle Murphy, University of Toronto Anne Pollock, King's College London _(lead editor)_ Deboleena Roy, Emory University _(lead editor)_ David Serlin, UC San Diego Banu Subramaniam, University of Massachusetts Amherst Kalindi Vora, UC Davis Sonja van Wichelen, The University of Sydney _(book reviewsco-editor)_
Cristina Visperas, USC AnnenbergCONTACT
editor@catalystjournal.org Follow @catalyst_stsMake a Submission
_Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, and Technoscience_ serves the expanding interdisciplinary field of feminist science and technology studies (STS) by supporting theoretically inventive and methodologically creative scholarship incorporating approaches from critical public health, disability studies, postcolonial studies, queer theory, sci-art, technology and digital media studies, history and philosophy of science and medicine. The editorial board welcomes submissionsat any
time.
Catalyst is a Society for the Social Studies of Science (4S)affiliated journal.
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