[NetBehaviour] This Friday: Cognitive Fluctuation, Distributed Sensing, and the Marking of Illness Mel Chen
Helen Pritchard
hvpritchard at gmail.com
Thu Oct 16 16:50:37 CEST 2014
Hi NetBehaviourists!
We would like to invite you to Mel Chen's public talk, this Friday, 17th October 4pm at Goldsmiths, University of London.
Hope you can make it! Please share widely!
best
Helen
A special late addition to the Sensing Practices seminar series:
Cognitive Fluctuation, Distributed Sensing, and the Marking of Illness
Mel Chen in the Citizen Sense “Sensing Practices” seminar series
Co-hosted with the Unit of Play
17 October 2014
16.00 to 18.00
Location 256 Richard Hoggart Building, Goldsmiths, University of London
Abstract
In this talk Chen considers a number of intersecting phenomena: the often feminized exceptionality of "brain fog" and other cognitive departures from expected temporalities, overlapping with more temporally durative (or unexcusable by other means) "chronic illness"; the narration of biochemical transactions in relation to bodies at various scales; and the affectively rich play in geopolitical adjudications between "toxicity" and "intoxication." Underneath all of these considerations lies a series of investments that could be understood as racially "tuned," an expression of Chen’s interest in the hidden intersections of race and disability.
Bio
Mel Y. Chen is Associate Professor of Gender & Women’s Studies at the University of California, Berkeley and the Director of Berkeley’s Center for the Study of Sexual Culture. Chen’s Animacies: Biopolitics, Racial Mattering, and Queer Affect(Duke University Press, 2012, Alan Bray Memorial Award), explores questions of racialization, queering, disability, and affective economies in animate and inanimate “life” and “nonlife.” Further writing appears in Women’s Studies Quarterly, Discourse, Women in Performance, Australian Feminist Studies, Amerasia, and the Journal of Literary and Cultural Disability Studies. Along with Jasbir K. Puar, Chen serves as series coeditor for a book series at Duke called “Anima.” Chensits on the board of directors for the Society for Disability Studies.
Sensing Practices
The Citizen Sense research group is hosting a year-long seminar series on “Sensing Practices.” The series attends to questions about how sensing and practice emerge, take hold, and form attachments across environmental, material, political and aesthetic concerns. Rather than take “the senses” as a fixed starting point, this seminar series instead considers how sensing-as-practice is differently articulated in relation to technologies of environmental monitoring, data gathered for evidentiary claims, the formation of citizens, and more-than-human entanglements. How might these expanded approaches to sensing practices recast engagements with experience, and reconfigure explorations of practice-based research?
------
Helen Pritchard
Researcher on European Research Council project, Citizen Sense
Goldsmiths, University of London
New Cross
London SE14 6NW
United Kingdom
www.citizensense.net
@citizen_sense
@helen_pritchard
helen at citizensense.net
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