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== iMedia Manifesto Part 1: Remember Cinderlla: Glass as a Fantasy Figure of Feminine and Feminized Labor ==
== iMedia Manifesto Part 1: Remember Cinderlla: Glass as a Fantasy Figure of Feminine and Feminized Labor ==


critique of [[Braidotti 2010]] -- affirmative politics "fails to move beyond dialecticism in as far as it restores rather than abandons oppositional thinking" (61) and
== Ubiquitous Women ==


== Ubiquitous Women ==
critique of [[Braidotti 2010]] -- affirmative politics "fails to move beyond dialecticism in as far as it restores rather than abandons oppositional thinking" (61)
 
== iMedia Manifesto Part II: Tell a Her Story: On Writing as Queer Feminist Praxis ==
 
Manifestos
 
"Rather than positing a then and now of the manifesto, transformed from an attitude of violence to one of humour, polemic to playfulness or even anti- to pro-feminism, I would argue that it continues to evolve into, and as an antagonistic form by means of writing about and writing out of social and historical contexts that remain structured by gendered hierarchical dualisms." (85)

Revision as of 18:17, 15 January 2017

Kember, Sarah. iMedia: The Gendering of Objects, Environments and Smart Materials. New York: Palgrave Pivot, 2016.

introduction

Critique of the "flattened ontology" of lists (Bogost 2012) and Object Oriented Ontology

"The fetishization of objects serves to align markets and metaphysics. It makes imedia OOPs theory compatible, if not necessarily complicit with, industry goals oriented to novelty and innovation -- iPhones -- rather than invention and intervention. Intervention is precluded in the shift from knowledge to things, and environments of things-in-themselves." (24)

Derangements of scale -- not opposed to imedia environmentalism per se, but requres "boundary cuts between co-constituting processes and the instrumentalisation, and potential re-instrumentalisation of forms" (24)

"It is is in boundary work -- as critical-creative decision-making -- that a politics and ethics of imedia are enacted. Te absence of boundary work allows politics to default to the mainstream, to what is {(or is soon, inevitably, to be) and produces derangements of scale in imedia theories that are very small and/or very big. Scales slide in the absence of epistemological structures, the boundary cuts of particles nad people, black and white, wood and trees that are too easily and conveniently conceded to, uncontested, made uncontestable and consigned to the philosophical past so that we can move on to better things-in-themselves." (24-5)

Bennett 2010 -- vibrant materialism compatible with OOO because it is "reactionary and foundationalist", establishing the grounds for a more positive/affirmative politics by substituting cynicism/paranoia/critique for more creative and generous outlook (28) -- this is a "dialectical feminism" that abandons critique; dangerous and limited critical strategy

Haraway's work as an alternative that reinvents nature through deconstructive figures (cyborg, modest witness, companion species) and provisional concepts (natureculture, FemaleMan) -- "It goes beyond strategies of substitution in order to break down dialectical structures and its principal mode is writing. Writing, for Haraway, is un-aligned and undecidable with respect to binaries. It is not critique any more than it is creativity. It is not humanistic any more than it is animalistic, or reducible to words any more than it is a means of presencing worlds. Writing is a mode of reinventing the world without having to affirm or deny it. It is, I would suggest, writing more than critique that is abandoned in dialectical feminism and with it goes the strategy of reinvwention that Haraway currently figures in terms of sf" (29)

Diffraction -- way of scaling; not just Harman/OOO reflecting the world but "engaging with a world that includes other worlders, other storytellers" (30)

iMedia Manifesto Part 1: Remember Cinderlla: Glass as a Fantasy Figure of Feminine and Feminized Labor

Ubiquitous Women

critique of Braidotti 2010 -- affirmative politics "fails to move beyond dialecticism in as far as it restores rather than abandons oppositional thinking" (61)

iMedia Manifesto Part II: Tell a Her Story: On Writing as Queer Feminist Praxis

Manifestos

"Rather than positing a then and now of the manifesto, transformed from an attitude of violence to one of humour, polemic to playfulness or even anti- to pro-feminism, I would argue that it continues to evolve into, and as an antagonistic form by means of writing about and writing out of social and historical contexts that remain structured by gendered hierarchical dualisms." (85)