Archive for 2024

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[Commlist] CFP: ICA 2025 Panel Against Technologies of Documentation: Queer and Trans Tactics of Resistance

Tue Oct 29 14:07:17 GMT 2024



Alexander Monea (George Mason University) is putting together a panel with Whit Pow (NYU) titled "Against Technologies of Documentation: Queer and Trans Tactics of Resistance" and we urgently need one more panelist from outside the United States.

They are submitting to the LBGTQ Studies SIG at ICA 2025 that will take place June 12-14 in Denver, CO. They are planning on a high-density panel with 6 panelists giving 5–8-minute presentations and ample time for discussion afterwards. Submissions are due on November 1, so they would need a title and 400-word abstract by the morning of November 1st to be able to submit everything on time.

Please feel free to reach out to Alexander ((amonea /at/ gmu.edu)) and Whit ((wpow /at/ nyu.edu)) for more information or to let us know that you'd be interested in joining them. Please remember, they only have on spot open on the panel and it has to go to a scholar from outside the United States, per ICA's rules.

Attached below is a lengthier panel description:

This panel examines (1) the ways in which technologies of documentation structure what can and cannot be known, said, and seen – what can and cannot /exist/ – in communication mediated by information and communication technologies, and (2) the ways that queer and trans communities are impacted by and organize tactics of resistance to technologies of documentation. For us, technologies of documentation operate similarly to how Dean Spade describes administrative systems in his book /Normal Life/, where he argues that administrative systems are not merely “responsible for sorting and managing what ‘naturally’ exists,” but instead “actually invent and produce meaning for the categories they administer, and that those categories manage both the population and the distribution of security and vulnerability” (2015, p. 11). For Spade, these systems are capable of doing ‘administrative violence,’ as they can exacerbate queer and trans precarity by rendering parts of their lives and selves alternately visible and invisible. Technologies of documentation work similarly to identify, categorize, memorize, quantify, digitize, and aggregate people, places, and things. Their practices are not ‘natural’, but instead are inflected by preexisting sociocultural biases. As such, they have a propensity to reinforce social hierarchy and marginalization. Our usage is intentionally broad, as we see it applying to a broad range of hardware, software, use cases, and user communities. For us, these technologies of documentation can be productively investigated from the perspective of queer and trans studies, whose facility in navigating plural, shifting, and irreducibly individual gender and sexual identities positions these fields well to explore the limitations and violence of technologies of documentation.


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