Event Description
What relations can technoscience make with radical politics in the aftermaths of environmental violence, racial capitalism, heteronormativity, and settler colonialism? Can epistemologies and practices built out of violence ever be remade towards justice? Does technoscience have a role in remaking our worlds out of the long aftermath? M. Murphy takes up a more than pessimistic and less than optimistic posture towards developing tactics for engaging the politics of technoscience. With Indigenous feminisms and queer leanings, Murphy draws out place-based tactics from environmental justice on Anishinaabe and Haudenosaunee territories to navigate towards an Indigenous feminist anti-colonial politics with and against technoscience
Event Speaker
- M. Murphy, Professor of History, University of Toronto
Event Information
Free and open to the public; registration required. Seperate registration is required for the Feminist Intersectional Science and Technology Studies (F/ISTS) Conference. Please see the event webpagefor additional information.
Hosted by the Department of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studiesat Barnard College and co-sponsored by