From 8add2433424a5659d62037695ffe84d68cf32c96 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: hellekin Date: Wed, 25 Jul 2018 14:02:29 +0200 Subject: v0 of the reader --- subrosa.html | 108 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 108 insertions(+) create mode 100755 subrosa.html (limited to 'subrosa.html') diff --git a/subrosa.html b/subrosa.html new file mode 100755 index 0000000..8012c45 --- /dev/null +++ b/subrosa.html @@ -0,0 +1,108 @@ + + + + + Ici THK — Cyberfeminism + + + +
+

Ici THK

+

Subrosa

+

Cyberfeminism

+
+
+
+
+

About the Author

+

Subrosa is a collective of cyberfeminists artists and + researchers, critically dealing with issues about + technology and the body. https://cyberfeminism.net

+
+
+

Sources

+

SubRosa Tactical Biopolitics, chapter 14, pp.221-242 (Subrosa, 1999)

+
+
+

Common Knowledge and Political Love

+ +

Under capitalism, femininity and gender roles became a + “labor” function, and women became a “labor class.” On + one hand, women’s bodies and labor are revered and + exploited as a “natural” resource, a biocommons or + commonwealth that is fundamental to maintaining and + continuing life: women are equated with “the lands,” + “mother-earth,” or “the homelands.” On the other hand, + women’s sexual and reproductive labor—motherhood, + pregnancy, childbirth—is economically devalued and + socially degraded. In the Biotech Century, women’s bodies + have become flesh labs and Pharma-commons: They are + minedfor eggs, embryonic tissues, and stem cells for use + in medical, and therapeutic experiments, and are employed + as gestational wombs in assisted reproductive + technologies (ART). Under such conditions, resistant + feminist discourses of the “body” emerge as an explicitly + biopolitical practice.

+
+
+

Primitive Accumulation

+

Human and animal bodies have been the most valuable + commodity in human culture since primitive accumulation + began. It follows, then, that bodies are also primary + sites of sovereignty, resistance, and contestation. In + this chapter, subRosa begins by tracing a brief history + of lay or “common” medical, and healing practices that + posed an embodied resistance to religious, medical, and + capitalist control of gendered bodies, reproduction, and + medical practices—and connects them to current social + struggles to create accessible and just public + health-care systems, biopolitical autonomy, and knowledge + in common. Researching and learning from these histories + is fundamental to subRosa’s cultural practice.

+
+
+

Resistance

+

Historically, women’s bodies have been notoriously + resistant to machine adaptation or medical regulation. + The unpredictable ebb and flow of menstrual cycles, + hormones, moods, libido, weight loss or gain, metabolism, + ovulation, pregnancy, gestation period, fertility, and + natural birth rhythms, have severely tested scientific + control and management methods.

+
+
+

Detournement

+

SmartMom is a detournement (a tactic used by the + situationists to change original meanings of texts or + images) of the concept of the Defense Advanced Research + Project Agency’s (DARPA) Smart T-Shirt technology, and + the cyborg engineering of the body for space travel, as + described in Manfred Clynes and Nathan Cline’s article + “Cyborgs and Space.” SmartMom satirically proposes a + civilian adaptation of the technology of the Smart + T-Shirt as a new means of surveilling the behavior of + pregnant women. Although the shirt was originally + engineered for remote battlefield wound sensing and to + facilitate telepresent surgery for soldiers or space + travelers, it was not hard for subRosa to imagine + “repurposing” DARPA’s Smart T-Shirt to control women’s + productive and reproductive labor.

+
+
+ +
+ + + -- cgit v1.2.3