User:Senka/special issue 3/pocket reader: Difference between revisions

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki
mNo edit summary
Line 17: Line 17:
==<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 25px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;"> How technology worldbuilds—among other things—gender (from the airport to the bedroom) </span>==
==<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 25px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;"> How technology worldbuilds—among other things—gender (from the airport to the bedroom) </span>==
Perhaps as a preface I should say that I am talking about the notion of 'technology' as Ursula K. Le Guin has described it in 'A Rant About “Technology”'.  
Perhaps as a preface I should say that I am talking about the notion of 'technology' as Ursula K. Le Guin has described it in 'A Rant About “Technology”'.  
'Its technology is how a society copes with physical reality: how people get and keep and cook food, how they clothe themselves, what their power sources are (animal? human? water? wind? electricity? other?) what they build with and what they build, their medicine — and so on and on.'
{| width=70% align=center
|<pre style="border:1px solid black; background:#FF9D9D; color:black;">
Its technology is how a society copes with physical reality: how people get and keep and cook food, how they clothe themselves, what their power sources are (animal? human? water? wind? electricity? other?) what they build with and what they build, their medicine — and so on and on.
|}
and
and
'Technology is the active human interface with the material world.'
{| width=70% align=center
|<pre style="border:1px solid black; background:#FF9D9D; color:black;">
Technology is the active human interface with the material world.
|}
So here a technology is a an x-ray machine, as much as it is language itself, as much as it is a spoon or a sex toy.
So here a technology is a an x-ray machine, as much as it is language itself, as much as it is a spoon or a sex toy.


===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">At the airport </span>===
===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">At the airport </span>===
At the airport they decide who I am by clicking a button*, as a result of the texture of the fabric I wear, my hair style that day and how aggressively I claim my private space by spreading my arms around me.  
At the airport they decide who I am by clicking a button*, as a result of the texture of the fabric I wear, my hair style that day and how aggressively I claim my private space by spreading my arms around me. <br>
* This machine, an x-ray in which the security personnel through a click of a button decide whether you are to be scanned as a 'man' or as a 'woman'. From Abigail Thorn I've heard this machine be referred to as the 'Penis Detection Machine' in her video essay 'Here's What Ethical AI Really Means'. This name really sizzles down to the fact that if you're for instance a pre-op trans woman, and the security click 'woman' the machine will register what it perceives as an 'anomaly' in your genital area. After that, you're supposed to get searched, and you're searched by the gender that they chose for you when clicking the x-ray scanner ('woman'->search->'woman' or 'man'->search->'man').
* This machine, an x-ray in which the security personnel through a click of a button decide whether you are to be scanned as a 'man' or as a 'woman'. From Abigail Thorn I've heard this machine be referred to as the 'Penis Detection Machine' in her video essay 'Here's What Ethical AI Really Means'. This name really sizzles down to the fact that if you're for instance a pre-op trans woman, and the security click 'woman' the machine will register what it perceives as an 'anomaly' in your genital area. After that, you're supposed to get searched, and you're searched by the gender that they chose for you when clicking the x-ray scanner ('woman'->search->'woman' or 'man'->search->'man'). <br>
I've been checked by both male and female security, and the only thing I can say is, men are perceived as a bigger threat. They're more thoroughly searched.
I've been checked by both male and female security, and the only thing I can say is, men are perceived as a bigger threat. They're more thoroughly searched. <br><br>


Once I was let through border control to return to the European Union only to be called back a second later. The security insisted that I was not person I claimed I was, but they would let me go this one time. The technology used to produce my unforgeable id, my passport, cannot keep up with a constantly changing or transitioning body. The photo in it is static and meant to be changed only every 10 years or so (due to the belief that we humans cannot change so drastically in that time frame).**
Once I was let through border control to return to the European Union only to be called back a second later. The security insisted that I was not person I claimed I was, but they would let me go this one time. The technology used to produce my unforgeable id, my passport, cannot keep up with a constantly changing or transitioning body. The photo in it is static and meant to be changed only every 10 years or so (due to the belief that we humans cannot change so drastically in that time frame).** <br>
As a friend of my later remarked the t in trans stands for terrorist.
As a friend of my later remarked the t in trans stands for terrorist. <br>
** Paul B. Preciado, 'Apartment on Uranus' + Ruben Pater 'Caps Lock'
** Paul B. Preciado, 'Apartment on Uranus' + Ruben Pater 'Caps Lock' <br>
[Contemplation on migration: being allowed to cross borders without fearing being stopped..•]
[Contemplation on migration: being allowed to cross borders without fearing being stopped..•] <br>
•  Boris Groys 'Migration as Universalism'
•  Boris Groys 'Migration as Universalism' <br>


===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">Anywhere / On the page </span>===
===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">Anywhere / On the page </span>===
Line 37: Line 43:
^ Feeling the constraint of my native tongue, Serbo-Croatian, I've been sitting on a proposal for a gender neutral option like a broody hen. Colloquially in the diaspora, Serbo-Croatian is called наш/naš (ours) because it encompasses more than these two languages (Bosnian, Montenegrin, Croatian and Serbian). This little signifier bridges the space of a former Yugoslav identity, and gives a name to a lack of a current identifier for people who share a (violent) history. <br>
^ Feeling the constraint of my native tongue, Serbo-Croatian, I've been sitting on a proposal for a gender neutral option like a broody hen. Colloquially in the diaspora, Serbo-Croatian is called наш/naš (ours) because it encompasses more than these two languages (Bosnian, Montenegrin, Croatian and Serbian). This little signifier bridges the space of a former Yugoslav identity, and gives a name to a lack of a current identifier for people who share a (violent) history. <br>
The way I was taught gender in language was in the order of importance: <br>
The way I was taught gender in language was in the order of importance: <br>
* He spoke - On je progovorio  
* He spoke - On je progovorio <br>
* She spoke - Ona je progovorila
* She spoke - Ona je progovorila <br>
* It spoke - Ono je progovorilo  
* It spoke - Ono je progovorilo <br>
Note: the verb leaves the trace of the speakers, the gender is always known. Information is always revealed. So my proposal was to work with omissions (or exist in them).
Note: the verb leaves the trace of the speakers, the gender is always known. Information is always revealed. So my proposal was to work with omissions (or exist in them). <br>
* They spoke - O' je progovoril'
* They spoke - O' je progovoril' <br>
Omit the information that reveals gender.  <br>
Omit the information that reveals gender.  <br>
Explain:
Explain: <br>
taj bol, ta bol <br>
taj bol, ta bol <br>
My friends, as accomplices, use language to produce or question gender best they can. *** <br>
My friends, as accomplices, use language to produce or question gender best they can. *** <br>
Line 60: Line 66:


===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">Online </span>===
===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">Online </span>===
Digital footprint, seeing the life of a digital twin, curated image of a self. Algorithmic facilitation
Digital footprint, seeing the life of a digital twin, curated image of a self. Algorithmic facilitation <br>
Gender marketing? The stats they have on you
Gender marketing? The stats they have on you <br>


===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">On the street </span>===
===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">On the street </span>===
Line 68: Line 74:
- 'In Defense of Drag' Vanity van Glow <br>
- 'In Defense of Drag' Vanity van Glow <br>
^ the zine about public + private <br>
^ the zine about public + private <br>
Facial recognition & surveillance  
Facial recognition & surveillance <br>
just being outside
just being outside <br>
^ fly on the wall device
^ fly on the wall device <br>
Lenses/ glasses/ clear vision — perception ^
Lenses/ glasses/ clear vision — perception ^ <br>
^ the project about pov blurry vision
^ the project about pov blurry vision <br>
[Tangent: siting in the public space, thinking about it as a political space, a space of protest and sociality, the public sphere? (Habermass) /////// and  Johana Hedva, 'Sick Woman Theory' disability and the public space, how to protest when chronically ill?]
[Tangent: siting in the public space, thinking about it as a political space, a space of protest and sociality, the public sphere? (Habermass) /////// and  Johana Hedva, 'Sick Woman Theory' disability and the public space, how to protest when chronically ill?] <br>
public space as a place of visible memory, of ruins or lack there of, of erosion ^
public space as a place of visible memory, of ruins or lack there of, of erosion ^ <br>
^ typeface based on erosion vernacular signs
^ typeface based on erosion vernacular signs <br>
^ the type foundry that would host it
^ the type foundry that would host it <br>


===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">At the park or at the forest</span>===
===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">At the park or at the forest</span>===
wilderness
wilderness <br>
+ Estraven Lupino-Smith Morality Cuts: Uncovering Queer Urban Ecologies
+ Estraven Lupino-Smith Morality Cuts: Uncovering Queer Urban Ecologies


===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">At the store</span>===
===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">At the store</span>===
Gender marketing?
Gender marketing? <br>


===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">At the hospital</span>===
===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">At the hospital</span>===
In some cases, although not my own yet, gender is produced by the technology of medication, HRT (hormone replacement therapy). In which trans and cis folk receive treatment in which ever direction of gender they want to head in. This process is admittedly way easier for cis folk. The moment a woman has three hairs on her chin and higher testosterone she is offered a way to "fix all of that", while trans folk wait for months, years, lifetimes.
In some cases, although not my own yet, gender is produced by the technology of medication, HRT (hormone replacement therapy). In which trans and cis folk receive treatment in which ever direction of gender they want to head in. This process is admittedly way easier for cis folk. The moment a woman has three hairs on her chin and higher testosterone she is offered a way to "fix all of that", while trans folk wait for months, years, lifetimes. <br>
I think hard about whether I want to allow my test results to be used for medical research. To allow practitioners to have more information about people like me—who have grown a tad bit different— and have hormonal differences; or to resist the shareability of the surveilance of my body and the feeling of being a 'lab rat'?
I think hard about whether I want to allow my test results to be used for medical research. To allow practitioners to have more information about people like me—who have grown a tad bit different— and have hormonal differences; or to resist the shareability of the surveilance of my body and the feeling of being a 'lab rat'? <br>
The medical industrial complex produces and unravels gender with each visit. •• When encountered with ambiguity, historically it has tried to fix the gender ambiguous body to fit into one of two proposed categories, ignoring all others that have a right to exist.
The medical industrial complex produces and unravels gender with each visit. •• When encountered with ambiguity, historically it has tried to fix the gender ambiguous body to fit into one of two proposed categories, ignoring all others that have a right to exist. <br>
•• Johana Hedva 'In Defense of De-Persons'
•• Johana Hedva 'In Defense of De-Persons'


===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">In the archive</span>===
===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">In the archive</span>===
The technologies of documentation and how they form historical narrative, as well as what they put in the archive............ continue *****
The technologies of documentation and how they form historical narrative, as well as what they put in the archive............ continue ***** <br>
the map is not the territory^, representation is not real life, yet it informs how we see the world and perceive our role in it
the map is not the territory^, representation is not real life, yet it informs how we see the world and perceive our role in it <br>
***** Virdžine and their history  
***** Virdžine and their history <br>
* Gender Accelerationist manifesto  
* Gender Accelerationist manifesto <br>
* Saidiya Hartman critical fabulation in 'Venus in Two Acts' and 'Intimate History Radical Narrative'
* Saidiya Hartman critical fabulation in 'Venus in Two Acts' and 'Intimate History Radical Narrative' <br>
* Carmen Maria Machado 'Dream House'
* Carmen Maria Machado 'Dream House' <br>
* Renate Lorenz 'Queer Art: A Freak Theory'
* Renate Lorenz 'Queer Art: A Freak Theory' <br>
& The pioneer oracle, how she spread lies (fictions about past worlds) or worse gossips (speculations about them)
& The pioneer oracle, how she spread lies (fictions about past worlds) or worse gossips (speculations about them) <br>
* Dubravka Ugrešić 'The Confiscation of Memory'
* Dubravka Ugrešić 'The Confiscation of Memory' <br>


===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">In the media</span>===
===<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, red); padding: 5px;">In the media</span>===
Line 118: Line 124:


==<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, black); padding: 5px;">The neighbours I encounter on this walks</span>==
==<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, black); padding: 5px;">The neighbours I encounter on this walks</span>==
* Johanna Hedva
* Johanna Hedva <br>
* Renate Lorenz
* Renate Lorenz <br>
* Paul B. Presciado
* Paul B. Presciado <br>
* Ren Loren Britton
* Ren Loren Britton <br>
* Leslie Feinberg (maybe)
* Leslie Feinberg (maybe) <br>
* Ursula K Le Guin (https://www.ursulakleguin.com/a-rant-about-technology & https://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/myl/IntroducingMyself.html)
* Ursula K Le Guin (https://www.ursulakleguin.com/a-rant-about-technology & https://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/myl/IntroducingMyself.html)
* Carmen Maria Machado
* Carmen Maria Machado <br>
* Dubravka Ugrešić
* Dubravka Ugrešić <br>
* Saidiya Hartman
* Saidiya Hartman <br>


==<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, black); padding: 5px;">Who I might have strayed/walked to far away from</span>==
==<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, black); padding: 5px;">Who I might have strayed/walked to far away from</span>==
* my friend Rade
* my friend Rade <br>
* Kaloyan Kolev
* Kaloyan Kolev <br>
* Mindy Sue
* Mindy Sue <br>
* Legacy Russels
* Legacy Russels <br>
* CJ the X
* CJ the X <br>


==<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, black); padding: 5px;">Questions for neighbours</span>==
==<span style="font-family: Helvetica; color: white; font-size: 18px; background-image: linear-gradient(180deg, white, black); padding: 5px;">Questions for neighbours</span>==
How close do they live to me?
How close do they live to me? <br>
What is the proximity?
What is the proximity? <br>
What kind of neighbour are they?
What kind of neighbour are they? <br>

Revision as of 14:58, 13 June 2024

Possible names of reader

  • Tangents and anecdotes
  • Walking with a pocket of questions
  • Questions weighing my pockets down
  • Questions of ... (and connect like a diagram)
  • How technology worldbuilds?
  • Routes
  • Questions to walk with
  • On my R(e)adar

Overarching topics/concerns

  • questions of narrative, worldbuilding and fiction
  • questions of the use of public space (bleja)
  • questions of memory and trauma
  • questions of gender and queer histories

How technology worldbuilds—among other things—gender (from the airport to the bedroom)

Perhaps as a preface I should say that I am talking about the notion of 'technology' as Ursula K. Le Guin has described it in 'A Rant About “Technology”'.

Its technology is how a society copes with physical reality: how people get and keep and cook food, how they clothe themselves, what their power sources are (animal? human? water? wind? electricity? other?) what they build with and what they build, their medicine — and so on and on.

and

Technology is the active human interface with the material world.

So here a technology is a an x-ray machine, as much as it is language itself, as much as it is a spoon or a sex toy.

At the airport

At the airport they decide who I am by clicking a button*, as a result of the texture of the fabric I wear, my hair style that day and how aggressively I claim my private space by spreading my arms around me.
* This machine, an x-ray in which the security personnel through a click of a button decide whether you are to be scanned as a 'man' or as a 'woman'. From Abigail Thorn I've heard this machine be referred to as the 'Penis Detection Machine' in her video essay 'Here's What Ethical AI Really Means'. This name really sizzles down to the fact that if you're for instance a pre-op trans woman, and the security click 'woman' the machine will register what it perceives as an 'anomaly' in your genital area. After that, you're supposed to get searched, and you're searched by the gender that they chose for you when clicking the x-ray scanner ('woman'->search->'woman' or 'man'->search->'man').
I've been checked by both male and female security, and the only thing I can say is, men are perceived as a bigger threat. They're more thoroughly searched.

Once I was let through border control to return to the European Union only to be called back a second later. The security insisted that I was not person I claimed I was, but they would let me go this one time. The technology used to produce my unforgeable id, my passport, cannot keep up with a constantly changing or transitioning body. The photo in it is static and meant to be changed only every 10 years or so (due to the belief that we humans cannot change so drastically in that time frame).**
As a friend of my later remarked the t in trans stands for terrorist.
** Paul B. Preciado, 'Apartment on Uranus' + Ruben Pater 'Caps Lock'
[Contemplation on migration: being allowed to cross borders without fearing being stopped..•]
• Boris Groys 'Migration as Universalism'

Anywhere / On the page

The technology of each language builds gender anew. In English, I am ethereal and genderless, a gender neutral pronoun is afforded to me. While in a Slavic language I am whichever binary option I choose that day, confusing both the people that love me and hate me for it. ^
^ Feeling the constraint of my native tongue, Serbo-Croatian, I've been sitting on a proposal for a gender neutral option like a broody hen. Colloquially in the diaspora, Serbo-Croatian is called наш/naš (ours) because it encompasses more than these two languages (Bosnian, Montenegrin, Croatian and Serbian). This little signifier bridges the space of a former Yugoslav identity, and gives a name to a lack of a current identifier for people who share a (violent) history.
The way I was taught gender in language was in the order of importance:
* He spoke - On je progovorio
* She spoke - Ona je progovorila
* It spoke - Ono je progovorilo
Note: the verb leaves the trace of the speakers, the gender is always known. Information is always revealed. So my proposal was to work with omissions (or exist in them).
* They spoke - O' je progovoril'
Omit the information that reveals gender.
Explain:
taj bol, ta bol
My friends, as accomplices, use language to produce or question gender best they can. ***
*** Ursula's perspective on gender in language https://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/myl/IntroducingMyself.html

I predate the invention of women by decades.
So when I was born, there actually were only men. People were men. They all had one pronoun, his pronoun; so that’s who I am. I am the generic he, as in, “If anybody needs an abortion he will have to go to another state,” or “A writer knows which side his bread is buttered on.” That’s me, the writer, him. I am a man.

+ Ren Loren Britton on the multiplicity and vernacularity of trans stories 'Turnabouts and deadnames: shapeshifting trans* and disabled vernaculars'
Perspective & POV ^
^3D web comic

Online

Digital footprint, seeing the life of a digital twin, curated image of a self. Algorithmic facilitation
Gender marketing? The stats they have on you

On the street

The technology of fabric does not build gender but builds how we perceive it. Reinforces stereotypes of what we expect the gender of the wearer to be, and those, oh well, those can always be played around with. ^
^ interviews in drag
- 'In Defense of Drag' Vanity van Glow
^ the zine about public + private
Facial recognition & surveillance
just being outside
^ fly on the wall device
Lenses/ glasses/ clear vision — perception ^
^ the project about pov blurry vision
[Tangent: siting in the public space, thinking about it as a political space, a space of protest and sociality, the public sphere? (Habermass) /////// and Johana Hedva, 'Sick Woman Theory' disability and the public space, how to protest when chronically ill?]
public space as a place of visible memory, of ruins or lack there of, of erosion ^
^ typeface based on erosion vernacular signs
^ the type foundry that would host it

At the park or at the forest

wilderness
+ Estraven Lupino-Smith Morality Cuts: Uncovering Queer Urban Ecologies

At the store

Gender marketing?

At the hospital

In some cases, although not my own yet, gender is produced by the technology of medication, HRT (hormone replacement therapy). In which trans and cis folk receive treatment in which ever direction of gender they want to head in. This process is admittedly way easier for cis folk. The moment a woman has three hairs on her chin and higher testosterone she is offered a way to "fix all of that", while trans folk wait for months, years, lifetimes.
I think hard about whether I want to allow my test results to be used for medical research. To allow practitioners to have more information about people like me—who have grown a tad bit different— and have hormonal differences; or to resist the shareability of the surveilance of my body and the feeling of being a 'lab rat'?
The medical industrial complex produces and unravels gender with each visit. •• When encountered with ambiguity, historically it has tried to fix the gender ambiguous body to fit into one of two proposed categories, ignoring all others that have a right to exist.
•• Johana Hedva 'In Defense of De-Persons'

In the archive

The technologies of documentation and how they form historical narrative, as well as what they put in the archive............ continue *****
the map is not the territory^, representation is not real life, yet it informs how we see the world and perceive our role in it
***** Virdžine and their history
* Gender Accelerationist manifesto
* Saidiya Hartman critical fabulation in 'Venus in Two Acts' and 'Intimate History Radical Narrative'
* Carmen Maria Machado 'Dream House'
* Renate Lorenz 'Queer Art: A Freak Theory'
& The pioneer oracle, how she spread lies (fictions about past worlds) or worse gossips (speculations about them)
* Dubravka Ugrešić 'The Confiscation of Memory'

In the media

Talks about technology build gender too. Some of us are far too familiar with the act of assigning gender to technology. All the female service robots Alexa, Sophia...
On the other hand, aliens and robots are often the only ones allowed a genderless marker in popular media (list examples)
I think to my partner telling me how Polish kids now, at the ripe age of entering primary school, are using gender as an insult. Much like gay was prior used to denote bad, lame, just really unfavourable in general. Then, this was a phenomena that arised in English-speaking societies or cultures. Yet, this is really the so-called rotten West import of the word gender. The word for gender in Polish is płeć or rodzaj, in Serbian rod, yet both of these Slavic languages are treating the notion of gender as something foreign and laughable. Something the West brought in for them to ponder over and ultimately ridicule.
* Ursula K. Le Guin Left Hand of Darkness

In the bedroom

Sex toys, the polluting influence of silicone, If someone told me I'm a product of pollution (microplastics), I would be offended
+ Heather Davis 'Toxic Progeny: The Plastisphere and Other Queer Futures', talks about a non-reproductive and ultimately queer future we are heading towards. It's an essay that really stabs you in the eye because: when Alex Jones said that the water is making the frog gay, he wasn't wrong. But even a broken clock is right twice a day. He failed to elaborate on why this is happening, how the hormonal structure of frogs is rapidly changing because they absorb so much through their skin, and the influence of microplastics is slowly queering their hormonal balance, making them less interested in hetero-reproduction. This is happening to humans too, just on a slower, less visible scale. Heather here calls un us to learn from queer people how to navigate this kind of future as a society.
fiction, imagination
+ Carmen Maria Machado 'Mothers' [1]. A (fictional) piece about one lesbian discovering that unbeknownst to her, she had a baby with her wife... biologically. It seems that no one besides her is surprised by this.
What would then a queer technology be?
^ A disobedience devices?
A current that misbehaves and bends out of shape? Generalization are pointless, but let's walk with this question.

The neighbours I encounter on this walks

* Johanna Hedva
* Renate Lorenz
* Paul B. Presciado
* Ren Loren Britton
* Leslie Feinberg (maybe)
* Ursula K Le Guin (https://www.ursulakleguin.com/a-rant-about-technology & https://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/myl/IntroducingMyself.html) * Carmen Maria Machado
* Dubravka Ugrešić
* Saidiya Hartman

Who I might have strayed/walked to far away from

* my friend Rade
* Kaloyan Kolev
* Mindy Sue
* Legacy Russels
* CJ the X

Questions for neighbours

How close do they live to me?
What is the proximity?
What kind of neighbour are they?