Haraway and Halberstam
Both of the readings for this week are available online. You can find Haraway here and Halberstam here on JSTOR. You have access to JSTOR articles through your home campus library holdings. If for some reason you have trouble with that, you should also be able to access if through a free account that will let you read three articles. Leave a comment if you have any trouble.
Bring a Device on Sept 26
If you are able to, please bring your device of choice (that allows you to use this site) to class with you today. Thanks.
Jezebel Event at Macaulay
We have been invited to this Jezebel Event at Macaulay on October 24. It happens to overlap with class time, so we will meet at 6:00 and then go downstairs at 7:00 for the event. The discussion is open to the public, so invite friends! Do please complete a registration form–our Communications department reached out to me, but they still want to get a good, official headcount.
See you tomorrow.
Readings Week 4
Readings are up!
For this week, you should have read:
- Rosser
- Freedman
- deLauretis
- Butler
- Sommerville
- Hunger Games
If you haven’t yet blogged, it is time to blog! Whether you are an auditor or taking the class for credit, you need to have an introduction post. If you are taking the class for credit, you should have up three weekly posts (besides your introduction).
I’m very happy about all of the spontaneous activity on the forum. Keep it coming. But do remember to check in and participate in the reading discussions.
See you Thursday.
de Lauretis
Hi Everyone,
I’ve heard that a few people are having trouble with the link I posted, so I’m posting a new one. You can find it in the Documents section. Please do the reading and join the discussion!
Lisa
Guidelines for Auditors
I’ve had a few questions from students auditing the class about what is expected of them.
My preference would be that auditors commit to:
- Complete readings and participate in discussions, both online and face to face if feasible
- Comment on blog posts made by students taking the course for full credit
- Participate in planning the final collaborative project
Other formal assignments–actual blog posts, short assignments, multimedia response, final project–are not required of auditors, but your participation is invited. If you are an auditor and have questions about the requirements, or if you have different ideas about your participation, please email me. You are very welcome in our class!
Link to de Lauretis Reading
Here is a link to the reading for next week. This link goes to a full text of the *book* on Scribd, a document hosting site. You need to read the first essay only, pages 1-30. You will need to create a Scribd account to get the full text, but it is free.
Week 1 Round Up
Hi Everyone,
Happy September!
As a regular part of class, every Sunday I will send out a roundup and reminder of what’s on the horizon.
Welcome to class and thank you to those who have posted introductions so far. If you haven’t had a chance, please do it soon! Auditors, it would be great if you could also post introductions.
Another great idea is to change your user avatar to something besides the default. If you aren’t comfortable posting a picture, just make it an image we can associate with you–whatever you like. To change your avatar, click on your name in the upper right-hand corner (after you have logged in) and then select “Edit Profile” from the drop down menu that will appear.
For the upcoming week, you have a few readings. The documents password for the the site is femtechnet. You need to read from Rosser and Fausto-Sterling (posted under documents) and a few chapters from Estelle Freedman’s book No Turning Back, which you should purchase (or check out of a library). All of these readings will provide background for the discussions coming up in the course.
For assignments, you should post in the class forum and you should complete one of two blogging assignment: reading response or technology diary. One small change from the syllabus: if your last name is A-K, do the reading response. If your last name is L-Z, do the technology diary. (These alphabetical splits will remain through the semester. I didn’t have the class list when I divided the alphabet, and we’re balanced better if we do it this way.) For either type of assignment, the writing style can be conversational and less formal than an essay, but you should still aim to create a coherent response that stays on topic and uses standard grammar and usage.
What are these assignments? Well, the reading response is a fairly typical
open-ended response to something you have ready. You can talk about how the
readings played off each other or about one specific thing, but in either case,
you should point to the text and evidence that it presents to elaborate on a
theme. You may want to focus on something that has particular relevance to your
experience, something you disagree with, or an idea that was new to you.
For the technology diary, you should choose one piece of technology that you use
in your daily life and reflect on how class readings have influenced the way you
think about it, or given it a new context. Think of technology broadly–pens,
pencils, tools, medicines, gadgets–it all counts. How is the object typically
used, and does it (or has it historically) been used in gendered ways?Does the
object have significance in constructing or reinforcing gender? Does it have
personal meaning to you?
Have a great Labor Day and please email me if you have any questions. I’m
looking forward to a great semester!
Lisa
Books You Should Buy
You need a few books for this course.
Estelle Freedman’s No Turning Back: The History of Feminism and the Future of Women
Suzanne Collins, The Hunger Games
Margaret Atwood, Year of the Flood
Class Readings and Materials
Books
Estelle Freedman, No Turning Back
Suzanne Collins, The Hunger Games
Margaret Atwood, Oryx and Crake
Articles and Excerpts: See Documents section
Judith Butler, “Imitation and Gender Insubordination” (from Inside/Out)
Teresa deLauretis, “The Technology of Gender” (from The Technology of Gender: Essays on Film, Theory, and Fiction)
Donna Haraway, “A Cyborg Manifesto” (from Simians, Cyborgs, and Women)
J. Jack Halberstam, “Automating Gender: Postmodern Feminism in the Age of the Intelligent Machine” (from Sex/Machine: Readings in Culture, Gender, and Technology)
Anne Fausto-Sterling, “Dueling Dualisms” from Sexing the Body
Sue V. Rosser, “Using the Lenses of Feminist Theories to Focus on Women and Technology” from Women, Gender, and Technology
Siobhan Somerville, “Scientific Racism and the Invention of the Homosexual Body” (from Queering the Colorline)
Films
Sleeper
Alien
Multimedia Materials
FemTechNet Dialogues (posted to the FemTechNet Commons)
Additional readings, including timely articles from blogs, newspapers, and online magazines, may be assigned. They will be linked on the course site.