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Carl Gelderloos deposited Book review: Robert Leucht. Dynamiken politischer Imagination. Die deutschsprachige Utopie von Stifter bis Döblin in ihren internationalen Kontexten, 1848–1930 Ulrich E. Bach. Tropics of Vienna: Colonial Utopias of the Habsburg Empire in the group
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 6 months agoA review of Robert Leucht’s “Dynamiken politischer Imagination. Die deutschsprachige Utopie von Stifter bis Döblin in ihren internationalen Kontexten, 1848–1930” (2016) and Ulrich Bach’s “Tropics of Vienna: Colonial Utopias of the Habsburg Empire” (2016)
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Nicky Agate replied to the topic Jeff VanderMeer's Borne in the discussion
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 6 months agoThanks, Sophia! Will check it out tonight. As an aside, I just binge-read Neal Stephenson and Nicole Galland’s The Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O., which, because it featured (a) time travel, (b) excessive bureaucracy, and (c) the military-industrial complex, was a thoroughly enjoyable read!
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Sophia Booth Magnone replied to the topic Jeff VanderMeer's Borne in the discussion
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 6 months agoPicking this thread up months later… I wrote a little piece on the Southern Reach Trilogy for the website Somatosphere. I’d love to hear thoughts on it if anyone is interested!
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Tobias Steiner deposited “FlashForward”: an experiment in Collective Memory Studies in the group
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 6 months ago“The thesis investigates the case of the modern Television drama series FlashForward and sets out to chart the employment of concepts of Collective Memory Studies in the narrative in order to reflect upon the ways of how social perceptions of the past and Collective Memory are remediated in the course of the narrative.
To achieve that goal, the…[Read more] -
Nicola Griffith deposited Norming the Other: Narrative Empathy Via Focalised Heterotopia in the group
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 6 months agoThis critical commentary argues that the novels submitted (emphasis on Ammonite, The Blue Place, and Hild, with three others, Slow River, Stay, and Always briefly referenced), form a coherent body of work which centres and norms the experience of the Other, particularly queer women. Close reading of the novels demonstrates how specific word-choice…[Read more]
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Ernesto Priego deposited Parables of Care: Instrumentality, Aesthetics and Utility in Devising a Comic for Dementia Caregivers in the group
Comics Scholarship/Comics Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months agoParables of Care: Instrumentality, Aesthetics and Utility in Devising a Comic for Dementia Caregivers. PDF file.
Presented at the 2017 Comics & Medicine Conference: Access Points Seattle. Public Library Central Branch, 15th – 17th June 2017. Seattle, USA.
This set of slides was modified slightly from its original version for online s…[Read more]
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Aimi Hamraie deposited Inclusive Design: Cultivating Accountability Toward the Intersections of Race, Aging, and Disability in the group
Critical Disability Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months agoAs a feminist disability studies scholar working on issues of accessi – ble and inclusive design, my participation in the Critical Health, Age, and Disability Collective (CHAD) in summer 2014 was my first introduction to the field of age studies. I was surprised to find how little my training had taught me about how to think critically about age…[Read more]
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Aimi Hamraie deposited Universal Design Research as a New Materialist Practice in the group
Critical Disability Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months agoIn Disability Studies, Universal Design (UD) is a concept that is often borrowed from an architectural or design context to mean an ideology of inclusion and flexibility with a range of applications in education, technology, and other milieus. This paper returns to UD as a design phenomenon, considering knowledge production practices as conditions…[Read more]
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Aimi Hamraie deposited Designing Collective Access: a feminist disability theory of Universal Design in the group
Critical Disability Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months agoUniversal Design (UD) is a movement to produce built environments that are accessible to a broad range of human variation. Though UD is often taken for granted as synonymous with the best, most inclusive, forms of disability access, the values, methodologies, and epistemologies that underlie UD require closer scrutiny. This paper uses feminist and…[Read more]
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Aimi Hamraie deposited Proximate and Peripheral: Ableist Discourses of Space and Vulnerability Surrounding the UNCRPD in the group
Critical Disability Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months agoOn geopolitics, disability rhetoric, and the CRPD
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Aimi Hamraie deposited Cripping Feminist Technoscience in the group
Critical Disability Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months agoIn feminist technoscience studies (FTS), the term technoscience conveys that scientific knowledge and technological worlds are active constructions of entangled material, social, and historical agents. Feminist analyses of assisted reproduction, environmental harm, digital media, and cyborg bodies constitute some of the work of FTS, a close…[Read more]
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Aimi Hamraie deposited Beyond Accommodation: Disability, Feminist Philosophy, and the Design of Everyday Academic Life in the group
Critical Disability Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months agoDisability has become a hot topic for feminist philosophy in recent years. Special issues of Hypatia and Disability Studies Quarterly, multiple conference keynote addresses, and a growing cadre of scholars are exploring the intersections of feminist and critical disability thought. As a disabled feminist scholar, I perceive these trends as a…[Read more]
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Aimi Hamraie deposited Historical Epistemology as Disability Studies Methodology: From the Models Framework to Foucault’s Archaeology of Cure in the group
Critical Disability Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months agoIn this paper, I argue for historical epistemology as a methodology for critical disability studies (DS) by looking to Foucault’s archaeology of cure in History of Madness. While the moral, medical, and social models of disability frame disability history as a progressive movement and replacement of moral and medical authority with s…[Read more]
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Aimi Hamraie deposited Universal Design and the Problem of “Post-Disability” Ideology in the group
Critical Disability Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months agoAlthough Universal Design gains popularity as a common sense strategy for crafting built environments for all users, accessibility for disabled people remains a marginal area of inquiry within design practice and theory. This article argues that the tension between accessibility and Universal Design stems from inadequate critical and historical…[Read more]
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Aimi Hamraie created the group
Critical Disability Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months ago -
Todd Comer deposited “’Space is the Place”: The Politics of Birth in Minority Report” in the group
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoSteven Spielberg’s 2002 Minority Report narrates two interrelated stories. The micro
story concerns a family, a kidnapped son, the ensuing trauma, and the work of mourning that
follows. The macro story concerns criminal justice, social stability, and hermeneutics at the level
of the nation state. The problem for both stories is ontological a…[Read more] -
Todd Comer deposited “Dilating Fixity: Pacific Rim, and the Erasure of Birth” in the group
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoThis paper discusses Pacific Rim as a film deeply concerned with birth, in particular the horror of birth, and the process by which birth is assimilated. The film may then be seen as part of an unbroken commentary on nuclear
weapons insofar as it is our technological, capitalistic, and nuclear capability that allows
us to close the “breach” and…[Read more] -
religioncomics deposited Kismet Seventy Years Later: Recognizing the First Genuine Muslim Superhero in the group
Comics Scholarship/Comics Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoKismet may not be the first Muslim superhero, but he may be the first worthy of that title. Some buffoonish characters preceded him, and other orientalist caricatures appeared on earlier comics pages, but without either superpowers or other key elements of the genre. This month (March 2014), on the seventieth anniversary of his first appearance,…[Read more]
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Robert Wauhkonen deposited Friend, Frontman, Foe: Snowman’s Lament in Atwood’s Oryx and Crake in the group
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoThis paper examines Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake in relation to environmental justice. The best-selling first novel in Atwood’s Maddaddam Trilogy, Oryx and Crake was widely hailed for its nightmarish depiction of a post-apocalyptic, bioengineered future. The major themes of the novel mirror key themes of the environmental justice movement tod…[Read more]
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selisker deposited “Stutter-Stop Flash-Bulb Strange”: GMOs and the Aesthetics of Scale in Paolo Bacigalupi’s The Windup Girl in the group
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoThis article raises questions about the aesthetics of scale as they appear relative to genetically modified organisms in science fiction and especially in Paolo Bacigalupi’s The Windup Girl (2009). Bacigalupi makes the unusual choice of representing GMOs largely through science fictional tropes of automatism rather than the grotesque. Because of t…[Read more]
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