Xenofeminist Hope and Dread, or How to Move Beyond Patriarchal Technocapitalism

Hypatia 37 (1):210-215 (2022)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

Who said manifestos are dead? Some thirty years after the publication of Donna Haraway's illustrious A Cyborg Manifesto, fifty years after Valerie Solanas's angry and delightful SCUM Manifesto, and 170 years after Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels's influential Communist Manifesto, a new manifesto in town in fact bears traces of all these and then some: The Xenofeminist Manifesto. This manifesto, which comes in a gorgeously designed booklet version as well as in a colorful and nostalgic 80s computer-culture website with nerdy hexadecimal page numbers and related Twitter account, is a work from the “xenofeminist” collective Laboria Cuboniks. The name of this collective, whose members are from various parts of the globe, is actually an anagram of “Nicolas Bourbaki,” a largely French collective of mathematicians in the early 1900s who sought to affirm abstraction, rigor, and generalization. Together with a firm foot in cyberfeminism and a strong penchant for the abstract and universal by way of the logic of computing against the arguably flawed universal of “nature,” the manifesto also clearly bears the marks of feminist ecocriticism, new materialism, queer theory, and technological accelerationism. The two books under review bring various activisms and insights together in an original way, and do so clearly with an eye toward reviving the cyberfeminist spirit through, among others, ideas from Shulamith Firestone's Dialectics of Sex. This pairing certainly had me excited, since, as I argue elsewhere, I am, together with Haraway's original cyborg manifesto, firmly of the opinion that feminisms of all kinds should intervene in and contribute even more radically to contemporary techno-culture and philosophy of technology. This is because clearly, new media and genetic technologies are at present some of the most powerful techniques by which we live and probably will live in the near future, and because these technologies are intimately interwoven with Eurocentric masculinism, heterosexism, militarism, and capitalism.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 91,423

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Images of hope.William F. Lynch - 1965 - Notre Dame [Ind.]: University of Notre Dame Press.
Images of hope.William F. Lynch - 1965 - Baltimore,: Helicon.
Tales of Dread.Mark Windsor - 2019 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 56 (1):65-86.
The Art of Collectively Loving Well in the Digital Age.Kate Milberry - 2017 - Foundations of Science 22 (2):297-300.
“And the Greatest of These Is Hope”: Reframing the Global Refugee Crisis.Barnabé Anzuruni Msabah - 2018 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 35 (2):117-123.

Analytics

Added to PP
2022-04-08

Downloads
14 (#968,362)

6 months
5 (#638,139)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Author's Profile

Ingrid Hoofd
Utrecht University

Citations of this work

No citations found.

Add more citations