Digging into Simone Browne’s application of critical race theory to surveillance studies.

Dark Matters: On the Surveillance of Blackness—Explained, Simone Browne

Show Notes

The two main subjects we mentioned on the show as relevant were critical theory (and specifically critical race theory) and surveillance studies. Notably, while Browne describes herself as a black feminist and makes reference to the adjacent idea of intersectionality, she never explicitly refers to critical (race) theory. We applied the term to her work based on the historical and interpretive methods she used.


Stephen reviewed our intro music, Joshua Crumbly’s “New Rock Thingy,” here.


Finally (as noted on air), Stephen was definitely recording from a closet:

screenshot of our Zoom call with Stephen in a closet

Upcoming Books

August (8.14 and 8.15): The Real World of Technology, Ursula Franklin
September (8.16 and 8.17): (probably) Technopoly, Neil Postman

(We actually have a tentative plan through the end of the year… but we’ll publicize it once we’re more solid!)


Credits
Music

“New Rock Thingy” by Joshua Crumbly. Used by permission.
“Winning Slowly Theme” by Chris Krycho. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0, meaning you can do whatever you want with this music… as long as you share it for others to likewise do what they want.

Sponsors

Many thanks to the people who help us make this show possible by their financial support! This month’s sponsors:

Daniel Ellcey
Douglas Campos
Jake Grant
Marnix Klooster
Spencer Smith

If you’d like to support the show, you can make a pledge at Patreon or give directly via Square Cash.


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