a blog of anarcho-transhumanist stuff
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anarcho-transhumanist earth
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From one perspective, a cyborg world is about the final imposition of a grid of control on the planet, about the final abstraction embodied in a Star Wars apocalypse waged in the name of defense, about the final appropriation of women’s bodies in a masculinist orgy of war (Sofia, 1984). From another perspective, a cyborg world might be about lived social and bodily realities in which people are not afraid of their joint kinship with animals and machines, not afraid of permanently partial identities and contradictory standpoints. The political struggle is to see from both perspectives at once because each reveals both dominations and possibilities unimaginable from the other vantage point. Single vision produces worse illusions than double vision or many-headed monsters. Cyborg unities are monstrous and illegitimate; in our present political circumstances, we could hardly hope for more potent myths for resistance and recoupling.
Donna Haraway, The Cyborg Manifesto:Science, Technology, and Socialist-Feminism in Late Twentieth Century,Routledge (via cyborg-witch)
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Printcrime
(Originally published in Nature Magazine, January 2006)
The coppers smashed my father’s printer when I was eight. I remember the hot, cling-film-in-a-microwave smell of it, and Da’s look of ferocious concentration as he filled it with fresh goop, and the warm, fresh-baked feel of the...
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what made me interested in anarcho-primitivism as a teenager was reading too much derrick jensen and john zerzan and the emotional response i had to the extremely graphic writing of jensen specifically, who managed to connect slavery genocide rape abuse -basically every bad thing ever- to...
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I remember when I was in the midst of a period of feminist analysis and critique in a philosophy class under an anarcha-feminist teacher. I remember seeing this piece as a metaphor for forms of household oppression, objectification, and other tasks that applied to women. As if they were a sort of merchandise.
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