Originally I was to have been situated in a plenary grouping with Susan Leigh Star, who unexpectedly died shortly before. Her work has been an important influence on mine, and I wanted to make that clear in my own presentation, so I based it on an interview with her published last year. The term "knowledge weaving" came from that interview.
St. Hugh's at Oxford was the site for a wonderful conference sponsored by the Center for Research on Socio-Cultural Change. (This link has more information.) It was hosted by folks from the Open University and the University of Manchester. Beautiful gardens just beyond the lecture hall where the conference plenaries were held. Originally I was to have been situated in a plenary grouping with Susan Leigh Star, who unexpectedly died shortly before. Her work has been an important influence on mine, and I wanted to make that clear in my own presentation, so I based it on an interview with her published last year. The term "knowledge weaving" came from that interview. A talksite to accompany the presentation is on the web at: http://weaveknowledge.blogspot.com/
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AuthorA feminist transdisciplinary posthumanities: Katie King's work on cognitive sensation, virtual worlds, the Inka khipu and 17th c. Quaker women's writing are all bits in recircling work on feminism and writing technologies. (Work on Blogger) Archives
February 2015
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