jesse_the_k: iPod nestles in hollowed-out print book (Alt format reader)
Jesse the K ([personal profile] jesse_the_k) wrote2019-01-21 05:48 pm

Boosts: Bunnies; Cyborgs & Tryborgs; We Are Not Our Paychecks

Great reading today from three places.

On DW:

[personal profile] seperis makes me laugh really hard about living with bunnies

Bunnies can eat through anything. Even zip ties. Even dozens of zip ties. Even all the zip ties. That is how I ended up with baby bunnies in the first place. They can also jump under duress three feet at a run and two feet just because they're assholes. (One of my tiny psychopaths can do three and a half feet, catch himself halfway over the top of the play area, and shimmy over.) Rabbits also like access to small, comforting, dark spaces to hide and cuddle (each other, not me).

https://seperis.dreamwidth.org/1041231.html
further background on bunny ownership: https://web.archive.org/http://seperis.tumblr.com/post/166559117285/the-bunny-files


On Granta:

Jillian Weise is a poet, performance artist, prosthetic-wearing ass-kicker. She delivers the Donna Haraway smackdown I've been waiting 20 years for:

When I tell people I am a cyborg, they often ask if I have read Donna Haraway’s ‘A Cyborg Manifesto’. Of course I have read it. And I disagree with it. The manifesto, published in 1985, promised a cyberfeminist resistance. The resistance would be networked and coded by women and for women to change the course of history and derange sexism beyond recognition. Technology would un-gender us. Instead, it has been so effective at erasing disabled women1 that even now, in conversation with many feminists, I am no longer surprised that disability does not figure into their notions of bodies and embodiment. Haraway’s manifesto lays claim to cyborgs (‘we are all cyborgs’) and defines the cyborg unilaterally through metaphor. To Haraway, the cyborg is a matter of fiction, a struggle over life and death, a modern war orgy, a map, a condensed image, a creature without gender. The manifesto coopts cyborg identity while eliminating reference to disabled people on which the notion of the cyborg is premised. Disabled people who use tech to live are cyborgs. Our lives are not metaphors.

[... snip ...]

I call them tryborgs. They have tried to be cyborgs, but they are stuck on the attempt, like a record skipping, forever trying to borg, and forever consigned to their regular un-tech bodies. They are fake cyborgs. They can be recognized because, while they preach cyborg nature, they do not actually depend on machines to breathe, stay alive, talk, walk, hear or hold a magazine. They are terribly clumsy in their understanding of cyborgs because they lack experiential knowledge. And yet the tryborgs – for reasons that I do not understand – are protective of cyborg identity. I often find my bio re-written by a tryborg: ‘She claims to be a cyborg’ or ‘she calls herself a cyborg’. Imagine if they said this about my other identities: ‘She claims to be a woman. She calls herself white.’

https://granta.com/common-cyborg/

I first encountered Jillian in her Tipsy Tullivan persona, as she excoriated AWP for their hostility to disabled writers:

https://www.youtube.com/channel/ucwfcyz-fipjq0u6v-fevomq/featured

To my delight, she was on one AWP 2016 panel, celebrating the 40th anniversary of her publisher BOA, reading several poems and a call to action/drinks. CAFE LOOP is available at Wordgathering


On Captain Awkward
I subscribe to the DW [syndicated profile] captainawkward_feed

Cap addresses “Tips for staying positive when your body hates you.” from a PhD student dealing with sudden liver cancer. Cap wisely turns to the wisdom of disabled people, and offers lots of excellent suggestions.

What if I told you that you don’t have to feel positive or stay positive or be positive. Stay alive. Positive can wait.

[... snip ...]

Fight the idea that being sick is something you’re inflicting on others. You say: “I feel like I’m a drain on everyone around me and I can’t even contribute academically anymore.” This ableist framing is hurting you and other people.

Your worth is not based on how much money you earn, it is not based on how much research or scholarship you do.

http://captainawkward.com/?p=46182

capri0mni: A black Skull & Crossbones with the Online Disability Pride Flag as a background (Default)

[personal profile] capri0mni 2019-01-22 12:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Re: the Captain Awkward advice:

I don't know if you're familiar with [personal profile] scarfman (he's more active on Tumblr and Twitter than DW -- Same tumblr handle, btw). But he has a saying that "Being a burden on society" is a contradiction. The whole purpose of societies is to support people. Saying someone is a burden on society is like saying you're a burden on your car, because it has to burn more fuel when it carries your weight, or that you're a burden on your umbrella when you ask it to keep you dry in the rain.

And humans created societies because we need them, just like we invented cars and umbrellas.
capri0mni: A black Skull & Crossbones with the Online Disability Pride Flag as a background (Default)

Re: Excellent point

[personal profile] capri0mni 2019-01-23 01:39 pm (UTC)(link)
:-) I first "met" him back in the days when Internet Social Media was Usenet Newsgroups, just shy of 20 years ago, now.
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)

[personal profile] davidgillon 2019-01-24 12:28 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, that's a lovely, and logical, thought!
capri0mni: A black Skull & Crossbones with the Online Disability Pride Flag as a background (Default)

[personal profile] capri0mni 2019-01-24 12:42 am (UTC)(link)
Indeed.

But since I've seen it articulated, it makes the current state of our governments all the more maddening. :-/
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)

[personal profile] davidgillon 2019-01-24 12:31 am (UTC)(link)
I really liked the Jillian Weise piece, though part of it went astray in my never having read (or heard of) 'The Cyborg Manifesto'.
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)

Re: I can't say you've missed something, exactly

[personal profile] davidgillon 2019-01-24 08:06 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm about halfway through. Oh, god, shoot me now!

I don't know what she is talking about, but it's definitely not cyborgs. It's not totally worthless, she's got a proto-form of intersectionality in there that predates Kimberlé Crenshaw's definition of the term by three years, but most of the rest of it seems to be using an awful lot of words, in a style that's needlessly opaque, to say some rather obvious things about gender and socialism, and criticising other people on the left for not being inclusionary enough in their thinking, while totally missing the obviously links to disability.

I've started so I'll finish, but one of the core points of a manifesto is making it accessible, surely?
davidgillon: Text: I really don't think you should put your hand inside the manticore, you don't know where it's been. (Don't put your hand inside the manticore)

Re: I can't say you've missed something, exactly

[personal profile] davidgillon 2019-01-28 04:16 pm (UTC)(link)
I finally finished it, and I'm never getting that time back, am I? I was seriously unimpressed when she mentioned 'The Ship Who Sang' as a positive example in the couple of sentences where she actually touches on disability. Typical clueless normie.

'Cyborg Manifesto' is definitely a misnomer, even 'Cybernetics Manifesto' or 'Computer Manifesto' would be wrong, because she's really talking about the disruptive effects of electronics technology as a whole, predating even the IT/Computer 'revolution'.
wohali: photograph of Joan (Default)

[personal profile] wohali 2019-01-26 10:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Great reads - thanks - I'd encountered the last one earlier in the week, and it was just what I needed at that moment.
brainwane: My smiling face, including a small gold bindi (Default)

[personal profile] brainwane 2019-02-11 03:12 pm (UTC)(link)
So I keep meaning to look up all the queer feminist cyberpunk manifestoes that Jean Cochrane mentions in this talk (talk description). Because it sounds like a lot of them are like "Haraway, we're so past that!" in an exciting way.