-
Read More: My VHS Archives Party
In 2017-2018, I initiated a working group sponsored by the Center for the Humanities at the CUNY Graduate Center, VHS Archives. Over seven meetings and one public presentation (Come Play with…
-
Read More: My VHS Archives: confessions from the field of queer feminist media praxis
Committed media praxis is a doing as much as it is a knowing. Queerness is a manner of being as much as it is a politics, theory, or set of…
-
Read More: The class of 1982: on woodsies, frat parties, throwing up, making out, and bad sex
I went to a fine public high school in Boulder Colorado. 1000 students per grade, we were the class of 1982. I was a good girl, a strong student, an…
-
Read More: The Work(s) of the VHS Archives Working Group
Please see on full post at the Center for the Humanities blog. The VHS Archives Working Group worked. Sponsored by the Center for the Humanities* at the CUNY GC, and…
-
Read More: Feminist Artist Carolee Schneeman Looks Backward and Forward
I interview Carolee Schneeman on the MS. Blog Q&A. Here’s a taste. Alex: So you are saying that even though your work was eventually, if perhaps belatedly canonized within art…
-
Read More: Resolution toward radical digital media literacy in a post-truth era
Below please find my Resolution for the panel, “Ex-Post-Facto? The Anthropology of Media and Journalism in a Post-Truth Era,” to be presented in my absence at AAA on December 1,…
-
Read More: Six Exceptional Haitian Women
On May 17, 2017, I had the honor of engaging in conversation with the Haitian film director, Arnold Antonin, after the screening of his film Six Exceptional Haitian Women (6…
-
Read More: #100, speak and spell, teach and tell, count and swell
“we can’t build a wall. we can only spout pure water again and again and drown his lies” (Eileen Myles, Resist Much, obey little) “Defiant Yet Jubilant Voices…
-
Read More: #99, information overload needs positive feedback effects
In Network Culture: Politics for the Information Age, Tiziana Terranova (2004) begins “this is a book about information overload in network societies and about how we might start to think…









