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Original Cyborgs: Disability and Technology

Monday, May 23rd, 2011

Cover of Cyborg ManifestoThe Exploration of the Cyborg

Unless you are a feminist, geek or academic, you have likely not come across the Cyborg Manifesto. It was written back in 1985 as an exploration of how the boundaries between human, animal and machine are blurring, as well as the implications of that breakdown of barriers (particularly in regards to feminist theory). Dr. Donna Haraway was one of the first academics to really comment on the vast diversity there is within the feminist community. She points out: Continue reading Original Cyborgs: Disability and Technology

Privacy Issues Continued

Monday, April 18th, 2011

privacy written on paper being erasedIn our last post — Privacy, Women with Disabilities and Online Space — we discussed online privacy issues for women with disabilities, as well as some of the things we do to address them as a group. Though it is impossible to summarize all privacy issues people with disabilities face, our team thought it was important to look at privacy through a broader scope. Invasions of privacy are a constant and pervasive part of the experience of having a disability, for many people.

To recap our last post, most online privacy issues are related to creating identity. The Internet has some ability to “normalize” people with disabilities and allow them to disclose whatever information they want when they are ready. If someone is uncomfortable with their disability, they may have no need to disclose their disability online to have a place where they can be free of stigmas that may be difficult off-line. Conversely, if someone is totally comfortable with their disability, they can be totally upfront about it online in order to reach out to others in the disability community. People have different expectations of what privacy means online, but the ability to control what information is disclosed can be a powerful experience that many people with obvious disabilities ordinarily wouldn’t have the freedom to do. The same could be true of gender or any other identity. People can experiment with what they disclose online in ways that feel safe to them. Continue reading Privacy Issues Continued

Privacy, Women with Disabilities and Online Space

Monday, March 14th, 2011

sign on hotel door that reads privacy pleaseThere is frequently discussion about privacy concerns online, but little discussion about the implications of how it impacts individual lives in both positive and problematic ways. As community organizers who work with and in vulnerable communities, privacy is a constant topic of conversation. To prepare for Privacy Camp, we discussed how privacy applies to our community and how it benefits our work in supporting the lives of women with disabilities. We outline the main points from the key questions raised below:

Why do women with disabilities need to have a private space?

Women with disabilities have unique issues–something we’ve written about before–and require a space that is private and “just us” in order to address them.  Women are socialized to be caregivers, and often do not speak up for their own needs in mixed spaces, even when around men who value gender equality. We think it’s important to have spaces private to certain identity groups where members can build commonality without outside pressures to help allow people to have pride in their identity in the rest of the world. Continue reading Privacy, Women with Disabilities and Online Space

Social Media Makes Us “Less Human”?

Monday, February 14th, 2011

Photo of people with social stream logos covering their facesThere has been a lot of interest on the Internet recently over MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) professor Sherry Turkle’s new book Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Technology and Less from Each Other and her assertions about how technology, including social media, makes us “less human”: “we are changed as technology offers us substitutes for connecting with each other face-to-face” (Turkle 2011). So, what exactly is “human”? The Wikipedia entry for the term “human” points out that “…self-awareness, rationality, and sapience, are considered to be defining features…” As humans, sharing that essential human nature of commonality of our experience with people who understand our reality is necessary to maintain mental health. We are social creatures, after all. So, is it the essential nature of social media and technology that make us more disconnected, or is it how people choose to use these technologies?

Continue reading Social Media Makes Us “Less Human”?