angurrola

  • angurrola wrote a new post on the site Gender & Technology 4 years, 5 months ago

    Play Game

    “Gig Night” is a second-person retelling of several incidents I have personally encountered while performing electronic music as a woman in various underground nightlife spaces in both LA and Chicago. […]

  • angurrola wrote a new post on the site Gender & Technology 4 years, 5 months ago

    Reading over my posts over the semester, it’s clear to me that I am always considering the potential counterargument or reaction to the pieces we’re reading in the context of people in my life I usually have deb […]

  • angurrola wrote a new post on the site Gender & Technology 4 years, 6 months ago

    The interview with Susan Bennett and the other contemporary sources surrounding the gendered expectations and programming of AI have fit in nicely with my interpretation of Speak this week. The biggest thing that […]

  • angurrola wrote a new post on the site Gender & Technology 4 years, 6 months ago

    Ruberg’s historical analysis of the origins of security questions, particularly the ubiquitous mother’s maiden name one, was definitely eye-opening for me. It’s fit well within our readings and discussions over […]

  • angurrola wrote a new post on the site Gender & Technology 4 years, 7 months ago

    I’m not much of a consumer of video games myself, but sadly not much of the imagery shown in Anita Sarkeesian’s video “Women as Background Decoration” surprised me. Both the blatant sexualizations and reducti […]

  • angurrola wrote a new post on the site Gender & Technology 4 years, 8 months ago

    Throughout Sara Ahmed’s analysis of the Feminist Killjoy, I have found ways to connect her calls to action to my personal pedagogy and habits. I am far more comfortable disrupting the social order of supposed h […]

  • angurrola wrote a new post on the site Gender & Technology 4 years, 8 months ago

    Cardenas’s offering of the Android Goddess model in her piece, “The Android Goddess Declaration: After Man(ifestos) really illuminated to me a new perspective to a debate I was having with a Davidson student rec […]