Introduction : machine/lives / Jennifer Terry & Melodie Calvert -- Virtually female : body and code / Margaret Morse -- Girl TV / Mary Ellen Strom -- Remote control : the electronic transference : She loves it, she loves it not : women and technology / Christine Tamblyn -- Networking women and grrrls with information/communication technology : surfing tales of the world wide web / Nina Wakeford -- Hiatus / Ericka Beckman -- Romancing the system : women, narative film, and the sexuality of computers / Andrea Slane -- Taylor's way : women, cultures and technology / Sara Diamond -- Indiscretions : of body, gender, technology / Ira Livingston -- Present tense / Gregg Bordowitz -- New technologies of race / Evelynn M. Hammonds -- The visible man : the male criminal subject as biomedical norm / Lisa Cartwright -- Inseminations / Bonita Makuch -- Unnatural acts : procreation and the genealogy of artifice / David Horn -- 23 questions / Kathy High -- Biotechnology and the taming of women's bodies / Soheir Morsy -- Brains on toast : the inexact science of gender / Joyan Saunders and Liss Platt -- Techno-homo : on bathrooms, butches, and sex with furniture / Judith Halberstam -- Is it tomorrow or just the end of time? / Connie Samaras -- Vulnerabilities / Andrea Slane -- The party line : gender and technology in the home / B. Ruby Rich -- Information America / Julia Scher.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
Processed Lives analyzes the interrelations of gender and technology. It considers how the terms of gender are embodied in technologies and, conversely, how technologies shape our notions of gender. The contributors explore the complex territory between the lust for technology and the fear of technology, commenting particularly on the ambivalence women experience in relation to machines. Discussing topics such as embryonic fertilization, the virtual female, networking women, the sexuality of computers, the inexact science of gender, surveillance systems, UFOs, contraceptives and the emancipation of Barbie, Processed Lives asks the question, who actually benefits from technology? Combining text with over 70 images and illustrations, Processed Lives: Gender and Technology in Everyday Life offers a broad, provocative, visually rich and playfully critical approach to the multifaceted relationships between masculinity, femininity and machines, now and in the future.