Captivating Technology : Race, Carceral Technoscience, and Liberatory Imagination in Everyday Life /
The contributors to Captivating Technology examine how carceral technologies such as electronic ankle monitors and predictive-policing algorithms are being deployed to classify and coerce specific populations and whether these innovations can be appropriated and reimagined for more liberatory ends.
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Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | Inglés |
Published: |
Durham :
Duke University Press,
2019.
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Series: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Online Access: | Texto completo |
Table of Contents:
- Naturalizing coercion: the Tuskegee experiments and the laboratory life of the plantation / Britt Rusert
- Consumed by disease : medical archives, Latino fictions, and carceral health imaginaries / Christopher Perreira
- Billions served : prison food regimes, nutritional punishment, and gastronomical resistance / Anthony Ryan Hatch
- Shadows of war, traces of policing : the weaponization of space and the sensible in preemption / Andrea Miller
- This is not Minority Report : predictive policing and population racism / Joshua Scannell
- Racialized surveillance in the digital service economy / Winifred Poster
- Digital character in "the scored society" : FICO, social networks, and competing measurements of creditworthiness / Tamara K. Nopper
- Deception by design : digital skin, racial matter, and the new policing of child sexual exploitation / Mitali Thakor
- Employing the carceral imaginary : an ethnography of worker surveillance in the retail industry / Madison Van Oort
- Anti-racist technoscience : a generative tradition / Ron Eglash
- Techno-vernacular creativity and innovation across the African diaspora and Global South / Nettrice R. Gaskins
- Making skin visible through liberatory design / Lorna Roth
- Scratch a theory, you find a biography / a conversation with Troy Duster
- Reimagining race, resistance, and technoscience / a conversation with Dorothy Roberts.