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Captivating Technology

Race, Carceral Technoscience, and Liberatory Imagination in Everyday Life

Ruha Benjamin

$66.95   $57.12

Paperback

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English
Duke University Press
07 June 2019
The contributors to Captivating Technology examine how carceral technologies such as electronic ankle monitors and predictive-policing algorithms are being deployed to classify and coerce specific populations and whether these innovations can be appropriated and reimagined for more liberatory ends.
Edited by:  
Imprint:   Duke University Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
Weight:   567g
ISBN:   9781478003816
ISBN 10:   1478003812
Pages:   277
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
"Foreword / Troy Duster  xi Acknowledgments / Ruha Benjamin  xv Part I. Carceral Techniques from Plantation to Prison 1. Naturalizing Coercion: The Tuskegee Experiments and the Laboratory Life of the Plantation / Britt Rusert  25 2. Consumed by Disease: Medical Archives, Latino Fictions, and Carceral Health Imaginaries / Christopher Perreira  50 3. Billions Served: Prison Food Regimes, Nutritional Punishment, and Gastronomical Resistance / Anthony Ryan Hatch  67 4. Shadows of War, Traces of Policing: The Weaponization of Space and the Sensible Preemption / Andrea Miller  85 5. This Is Not Minority Report: Predictive Policing and Population Racism / R. Joshua Scannell  107 Part II. Surveillance Systems from Facebook to Fast Fashion 6. Racialized Surveillance in the Digital Service Economy / Winifred Poster  133 7. Digital Character in ""The Scored Society"": FICO, Social Networks, and the Competing Measurements of Creditworthimess / Tamara K. Nopper  170 8. Deception by Design: Digital Skin, Racial Matter, and the New Policing of Child Sexual Exploitation / Mitali Thakor  188 9. Employing the Carceral Imaginary: An Ethnography of Worker Surveillance in the Retail Industry / Madison Van Oort  209 Part III. Retooling Liberation from Abolitionists to Afrofuturists 10. Anti-Racist Technoscience: A Generative Tradition / Ron Eglash  227 11. Techo-Vernacular Creativity and Innovation across the African Diaspora and Global South / Nettrice R. Gaskins  252 12. Making Skin Visible through Liberatory Design / Lorna Roth  275 13. Scratch a Theory, You Find a Biography: A Conversation with Troy Duster  308 14. Reimagining Race, Resistance, and Technoscience: A Conversation with Dorothy Roberts  328 Bibliography  349 Contributors  389 Index  393"

Ruha Benjamin is Associate Professor of African American Studies at Princeton University and the author of People's Science: Bodies and Rights on the Stem Cell Frontier.

Reviews for Captivating Technology: Race, Carceral Technoscience, and Liberatory Imagination in Everyday Life

Benjamin presents a rich and original contribution to critical studies of race and technoscience. -- Clara Hick * Ethnic and Racial Studies * The book comes at a timely moment, contributing to pressing contemporary conversations about predictive algorithms, bias in AI, new modes of surveillance, and the myriad ways our increasingly technologically mediated lives are experienced unequally along lines of race, class, and gender. . . . Captivating Technology offers a meaningful contribution to public and scholarly discussions of technological (in)justice. -- Naomi Zucker * Somatosphere *


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