Katie King
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Papers & Presentations --

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Published papers and chapters:

“A Naturalcultural Collection of Affections: Transdisciplinary Stories of Transmedia Ecologies Learning.” The Scholar and the Feminist Online: Special issue on Feminist Media Theory: Iterations of Social Difference 10/3. (Summer 2012): n. pag. Available at: http://sfonline.barnard.edu/feminist-media-theory/a-naturalcultural-collection-of-affections-transdisciplinary-stories-of-transmedia-ecologies-learning/  

“Feminist Worlding: Media Ecologies Learning.” Co-authored with Jarah Moesch. Chapter in Feminist Cyberspaces, pp. 14-32. Edited by Sharon Collingwood, Alvina E. Quintana, and Caroline J. Smith. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. 2012. (Included in sample pdf here.) 

"Networked Reenactments, a thick description amid authorships, audiences and agencies in the nineties." In Writing Technologies 2/1 (2008). Available online at: http://www.ntu.ac.uk/writing_technologies/Current_journal/King/index.html

"Women in the Web: teaching technology narratives." Chapter in The Politics of Information: the electronic mediation of social change. Edited by Marc Bousquet, Bruce Simon, and Katherine Wills. AltX. 2004. Available online at: http://www.altx.com/ebooks/infopol.html 

"Historiography as Reenactment: metaphors and literalizations of TV documentaries." In Extreme and Sentimental History. Special issue of Criticism 46/3 (2004): 459-475 [PDF]

"Productive agencies of feminist theory: the work it does." Feminist Theory 2/1 (2001): 94-98 [PDF]

"Feminism and Writing Technologies: Teaching Queerish Travels through Maps, Territories, and Pattern." Configurations 2 (Winter 1994): 89-106 [PDF]

"Local and Global: AIDS Activism and Feminist Theory." In Imaging Technologies, Inscribing
Science. Special issue of camera obscura 28 (January 1992): 78-99 [PDF]

"Bibliography and a Feminist Apparatus of Literary Production." TEXT 5: Transactions of the Society for Textual Scholarship (1991): 91-103 [PDF]

"Audre Lorde's Lacquered Layerings: The Lesbian Bar as a Site of Literary Production."
Cultural Studies 2 (October 1988): 321-342 [PDF} 

"The Situation of Lesbianism as Feminism's Magical Sign: Contests for Meaning and the U.S. Women's Movement, 1968-1972." In Feminist Critiques of Popular Culture. Special issue of Communication 9 (Fall 1985): 65-91 [PDF]

• Webfestschriften

"Pastpresents: Playing cat's cradle with Donna Haraway." Essay in Thinking with Donna Haraway. Webfestscrift for Donna Haraway online at: http://playingcatscradle.blogspot.com/ 

• Working Papers currently Online (public and available for citation):

"Theorizing Structures in Women's Studies"  (2002). Available at the Digital Repository at the University of Maryland (DRUM) at: http://hdl.handle.net/1903/3029 or http://theowmst.blogspot.com/  

"Flexible Knowledges, Histories under Globalization: the Smithsonian's Science in American Life & commercial knowledge making practices"  (2004). Available online at: http://flexknow.blogspot.com/ (much of this material has subsequently been included in King. 2011. Networked Reenactments. Duke) 

"Demonstrations & Experiments in Epistemological Decorum: seventeenth-century Quaker writing technologies and the Scientific Revolution" (2004). (For Folger Colloquium: Technologies of the Literal.) Available: http://demoexper.blogspot.com/ or http://www.academia.edu/293605/Demonstrations_and_Experiments_Quakers_plain_style_and_the_Scientific_Revolution  

• Talking Sites Online, to complete or accompany papers and invited talks (public and available for citation):

In Knots: Transdisciplinary Khipu. For the Latin American Studies Center Café Break Series, University of Maryland, College Park, Wednesday, November 7; at: http://transkhipu.blogspot.com/  

"Clarity here would be misleading” (Latour 2004:209): transcontextualities and feminisms. For panel “Varieties of Cybernetic Systems”at the Society for Literature, Science, and the Arts (SLSA) Annual Conference: Non-human; 30 September, 2012, Milwaukee WI; at: http://claritynot.blogspot.com/  

Among transcontextual feminisms we grow boundary objects. For “An Ecology of Ideas,” a joint conference of the American Society for Cybernetics and the Bateson Idea Group, Asilomar, California, 11 July 2012; at: http://femcontext.blogspot.com/

Khipu: design affections. For "Knotting in Common," Goldsmiths, University of London, Friday 15 June 2012; at: http://affectdesign.blogspot.com/ 

In medias res: living in the middle of (media) things. For “Entanglements of New Materialisms” (The Third Annual New Materialisms Conference), 25-26 May 2012, Linköping University, Sweden. Organized by The Posthumanities Hub and Network: Next Generation, and InterGender; at: http://thingmedia.blogspot.com/ 

SF Ecologies: speculative, feminist, science as knowledges. For "Delany at 70: Honoring the Life & Work of Samuel R. Delany" (The Fifth Annual DC Queer Studies Symposium), 20 April 2012, University of Maryland, College Park; at: http://ecosfking.blogspot.com/   

Transdisciplinarities: queering the pitch. For panel “Tracing Technoscientific Imaginaries Through Contemporary Culture” at the Annual Meeting of the Society for the Social Studies of Science (4S), Cleveland OH, November 5, 2011; at: http://queertransd.blogspot.com/ 

Growing Boundary Objects: among transcontextual feminisms. For the Science & Justice Working Group, for conference on “The State of Science & Justice: Conversations in Honor of Susan Leigh Star,” for plenary panel “Cui Bono?” University of California, Santa Cruz, 3 June 2011; at: http://growbobjects.blogspot.com/  
 
Social Media Learning: a necessarily altering infrastructure for Gender Studies. For Tema Genus [the division for interdisciplinary gender research and research training], for mini-conference/workshop on “Socio-techno-pedagogies of today and in five years time,” Linköping University, Sweden, 29 March 2011; at: http://socmedlearn.blogspot.com/ 

Knowledges Weaving Stories. The Centre for Research on Socio-Cultural Change: The Social Life of Methods, 31 August 2010, St. Hugh's College, Oxford; at: http://weaveknowledge.blogspot.com/ 

You are not the author anymore. Centrum för vetenskap och värderingar and Umeå centrum för genusstudier, 14 December 2009, Umeå University, Sweden; at: http://notauthor.blogspot.com/ 

SL Tranimal: My Distributed Animality. SLSA: Decodings, for panel “TRANimalS: Theorizing The Trans- in Zoontology.” Atlanta, 7 November 2009; at: http://sltranimal.blogspot.com/ 

Blogger Grrls: Feminist Practices, New Media, and Knowledge Production. Digital Humanities, University of Maryland, College Park, 24 June 2009; at: http://grrrlingitinsl.blogspot.com/ 

Queer Transdisciplinarities. DC Queer Studies Symposium, Faculty Paper Session on "Constructing Queer Knowledge,” 18 April 2008, University of Maryland, College Park; at: http://queertransdis.blogspot.com/ 

'Never Human': feminist transdisciplinarity and a posthumanities. The Nordic Research School in Interdisciplinary Gender Studies, international seminar on "Feminist Methodologies," 25 November 2008, Södertörn University College, Stockholm, Sweden; at: http://neverwe.blogspot.com/ 

'Global Gay' and 'Dubbing Culture,' keywords for Queer Globalizations. DC Queer Studies Symposium, roundtable on "Keywords in Queer Studies," 18 April 2008, University of Maryland, College Park; at: http://keyqueer.blogspot.com/   

Networked Reenactments, finding audiences in the nineties. For Print Culture Area Group, Library of Congress, 7 Mar 2008; at: http://netreen.blogspot.com/ 

Trans Knowledges, the default is Transformation. For Global Queeries: Sexualities, Globalities, Postcolonialities Conference, plenary panel on "Crossing (Queer) Disciplines," University of Western Ontario, Canada, 13 May 2006; at: http://transkno.blogspot.com/ & [PDF] 

Knotting Knowledges, emergent knowledge systems and the Inka khipu, Society for Literature, Science and the Arts [SLSA], 11 Nov 2005, at: http://knotkno.blogspot.com/ 

Uncommon Interdisciplines Connecting Gender & Technology: cyberculture studies and the history of the book. Southeast Women’s Studies Association [SEWSA] Gender & Technology Conference, "Research, revisions, policies and consequences," plenary panel on "Feminist Contributions to Studying Technology," Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, 20 March 2003; at: http://uncominter.blogspot.com/  

To the National Library of Medicine Internet Film Series, in conjunction with the Exhibition "The Once and Future Web: worlds woven by the Telegraph and the Internet," Bethesda, Maryland, 15 May 2002. For the film "You've Got Mail," commentary here: http://commentugot.blogspot.com/

On Interdisciplinary Friendship. Conference on Critical Cyberculture Studies: Mapping an Evolving Discipline, University of Maryland, 27 April 2002, at: http://dhinterdis.blogspot.com/ 

Feminist 'Writing' Technologies: Ecologies, narratives, categories. Center for the Study of Women, Science, and Technology and the School of Literature, Communication and Culture, Georgia Institute of Technology, 10 April 2001; at: http://ecofemtech.blogspot.com/  

Queering Infrastructure, Generations, (Inter)indisciplinarities. American Studies Association Annual Meetings, 8 November 2001, Washington, DC: at: http://queerinfr.blogspot.com/ 

Feminist technoscience uses of "work"--invisible work and articulation work. Spring 2001 Work-in-Progress WMST Colloquium Series, University of Maryland, College Park; 14 February 2001; at: http://wmstcolloq01.blogspot.com/  

What Counts as an Archive? Women & Gender & Archivology. Center for Renaissance and Baroque Studies Conference, "Attending to Early Modern Women: Gender, Culture, and Change," University of Maryland, College Park, 10 November 2000; at: http://archivemw00.blogspot.com/   

CounterIntuitive Interconnections: Taking apart teaching, research and information technology. MITH Digital Dialogue, University of Maryland, College Park, 11 April 2000; at: http://counterintu.blogspot.com/  

Star Trek Media Art. Presentation in celebration of exhibition possiblefutures: science fiction art from the Frank Collection, 3 February 2000, University of Maryland Art Gallery; at: http://trkmediaart.blogspot.com/ 

Everything You Always Wanted to Know about the World Wide Web, by Katie King with David Silver. (Earlier versions of this paper were originally introduced as presentations for the Mini-Center for Teaching Interdisciplinary Studies, May 10, 1999 and for Academic Information Technology Services, June 10, 1999 by both King and Silver. These all drew upon their courses and upon a series of workshops King had done for the UMD Libraries since 1997); at: http://everythingwwwwant.blogspot.com/

Seventeenth-Century Quaker Women. Folger Library Institute on the Graphic Revolution in Early Modern Europe, June 29, 1996; at: http://fwtfemsub.blogspot.com/ 

Writing technologies & the globalization of Highlander. History of Consciousness Colloquium Series, University of California, Santa Cruz, May 8, 1996; at: http://fwtfemsub.blogspot.com/p/blog-page.html  

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