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Queer Feminist Science Studies: A Reader [Pehme köide]

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Queer Feminist Science Studies takes a transnational, trans-species, and intersectional approach to this cutting-edge area of inquiry between women’s, gender, and sexuality studies and science and technology studies (STS). The essays here “queer”—or denaturalize and make strange—ideas that are taken for granted in both areas of study. Reimagining the meanings of and relations among queer and feminist theories and a wide range of scientific disciplines, contributors foster new critical and creative knowledge-projects that attend to shifting and uneven operations of power, privilege, and dispossession, while also highlighting potentialities for uncertainty, subversion, transformation, and play.

Theoretically and rhetorically powerful, these essays also take seriously the materiality of “natural” objects and phenomena: bones, voles, chromosomes, medical records and more all help substantiate answers to questions such as, What is sex? How are race, gender, sexuality, and other systems of differences co-constituted? The foundational essays and new writings collected here offer a generative resource for students and scholars alike, demonstrating the ingenuity and dynamism of queer feminist scholarship.

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A superb collection of essays organized around queer feminist science studies, a constellation of fields that is traceable to both particular genealogies as well as emergent ones. -- David Serlin, author of Replaceable You: Engineering the Body in Postwar America This reader brings together new and underutilized essays that develop queer feminist approaches to science. -- Lisa Weasel, coeditor of Feminist Science Studies: A New Generation
Acknowledgments xi
Queer Feminist Science Studies: An Introduction 3(22)
PART ONE Histories of Difference
25(72)
Sexing the X: How the X Became the "Female Chromosome"
30(13)
Sarah S. Richardson
Pelvic Politics: Sexual Dimorphism and Racial Difference
43(13)
Sally Markowitz
The Sexual Reproduction of "Race": Bisexuality, History, and Racialization
56(12)
Merl Storr
From Masturbator to Homosexual: The Construction of the Sex Pervert
68(14)
Ladelle McWhorter
"An Unnamed Blank that Craved a Name": A Genealogy of Intersex as Gender
82(15)
David A. Rubin
PART TWO Contemporary Archives and Case Studies
97(76)
Black Anality
102(12)
Jennifer C. Nash
At the Same Time, Out of Time: Ashley X
114(13)
Alison Kafer
"BIID"? Queer (Dis)Orientations and the Phenomenology of "Home"
127(14)
Nikki Sullivan
The Allure of Artifice: Deploying a Filipina Avatar in the Digital Porno-Tropics
141(16)
Mitali Thakor
Gone, Missing: Queering and Racializing Absence in Trans & Intersex Archives
157(16)
Hilary Malatino
PART THREE Disruptive Practices
173(76)
Immodest Witnessing, Affective Economies, and Objectivity
177(15)
Michelle Murphy
Pussy Ballistics and the Queer Appeal of Peristalsis, or Belly Dancing with Margaret Cho
192(15)
Rachel Lee
Embodiments of Safety
207(14)
Kane Race
Consent, Capacity, and the Non-Narrative
221(13)
Amber Musser
Brains, Sex, and Queers 2090: An Ideal Experiment
234(15)
Isabelle Dussauge
PART FOUR Beyond the Human
249(78)
"Why Do Voles Fall in Love?": Sexual Dimorphism in Monogamy Gene Research
254(14)
Angela Willey
Sara Giordano
Natural Convers(at)ions: Or, What if Culture Was Really Nature All Along?
268(14)
Vicki Kirby
"The Bio-Technological Impact" and "Abstract Sex"
282(14)
Luciana Parisi
Toxic Animacies, Inanimate Affections
296(14)
Mel Y. Chen
Plasmodial Improprieties: Octavia E. Butler, Slime Molds, and Imagining a Femi-Queer Commons
310(17)
Aimee Bahng
Index 327
Cyd Cipolla is associate faculty in the Gallatin School of Individualized Study at New York University. Kristina Gupta is assistant professor in the Department of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Wake Forest University. David A. Rubin is assistant professor in the Department of Women's and Gender Studies at the University of South Florida. Angela Willey is assistant professor in the Department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. She is the author of Undoing Monogamy: The Politics of Science and the Possibilities of Biology.