does this resonate with anybody
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Chile

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Brazil
seen from United States

seen from Chile
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Italy
seen from United States
seen from Cambodia

seen from Indonesia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Canada
seen from United Kingdom
does this resonate with anybody
Donna Haraway’s notion of ‘speculative fabulation’ is rad a.f. to think about when in a research-creation-missioned, open-your-damned-frameworks state of working mind.
Book Review: Making Kin not Population by Adele Clarke (Editor), Donna J. Haraway (Editor)
Book Review: Making Kin not Population by Adele Clarke (Editor), Donna J. Haraway (Editor)
See below for my original post on Instagram about this book.
Making Kin introduced me to new perspectives on the issue, though I came for Kim TallBear and Donna Haraway. One takeaway I’m still grappling with is my reaction to this quote from Murphy (who I also quoted below): “…is there any surprise that it remains easier to imagine doing something about population than ending capitalism?”
My…
View On WordPress
Screenshot from lecture by Donna Haraway, at Youtube. “Making Oddkin: Story Telling for Earthly Survival”
YaleUniversity
Published on Oct 26, 2017
On the occasion of receiving the Wilbur L. Cross Medal for Distinguished Alumni, one of Yale’s highest honors, Donna J. Haraway gave a public lecture demonstrating the power of narratives that bring together biology, activism, and art. In the lecture, Haraway describes a series of “contact zones” that reveal practices for becoming worldly in a time of unprecedented environmental destruction.
Donna Haraway writes: Every time I give a talk, listening to what I said, I am embarrassed by the central and key citations I did not do, here prominently to Susan Harding and also Marco Harding for all the research, conversations, references and thinking about diverse Inuit worlds and people, especially about Sila, hunting, relational human & nonhuman personhood through living on the land, and the design of the Wear Qisi/Become Seal in 8th slide. For me, the image and the discussion were initiated by Susan and fleshed out with her, Paulette Metuq, Kevin O'Connor, and Marisol de la Cadena, partly on Facebook but growing out of Susan and Marco Harding's and Kevin O'Connor's participation in Bush School in Pangnirtung in summer 2015, resulting in the collaboration with Paulette Metuq. Also, the 1st slide is a design by Sandra Dieckmann, “Ouroborus of the Witches," used in the Women's Marches in January 2017. With apologies, I am sure I missed other important citations critical to the talk, but these are crucial. The fact that talks go online makes citing explicitly even more important as the unwritten talks with all their gaps and missing sources circulate. Please include these citations if you share the video.
Donna Haraway : Story telling for Earthly Survival Fabrizio Terranova 2016