Your data. Your choice.

If you select «Essential cookies only», we’ll use cookies and similar technologies to collect information about your device and how you use our website. We need this information to allow you to log in securely and use basic functions such as the shopping cart.

By accepting all cookies, you’re allowing us to use this data to show you personalised offers, improve our website, and display targeted adverts on our website and on other websites or apps. Some data may also be shared with third parties and advertising partners as part of this process.

dea ex machina

German, Helen Hester, Jennifer Sophia Theodor, Laboria Cuboniks, Shulamith Firestone, Stephan Geene, 2015
Price in EUR including VAT
Delivered between Tue, 19.5. and Thu, 21.5.
Only 2 pieces in stock at third-party supplier
Supplied by
preigu DE
Free shipping starting at 30,–

Product details

"Although both are connected in a ritual dance, I would rather be a cyborg than a goddess" - Donna Haraway, 1995. Among the many critiques that the manifesto for an accelerationist politics (Williams/Srnicek) has sparked, the denunciation of the project as an expression of a macho technonihilism appears particularly insidious. Those debates that seek to turn accelerationism into a 21st-century futurism, primarily drawing from crude masculinity and the rapid speed of machines, overlook, firstly, its potential for contemporary gender politics and, secondly, its connection to existing technofeminist thought. Dea ex machina attempts to bring back some of the repressed genealogies that illuminate the accelerationist project against the backdrop of 50 years of heterogeneous feminist gender and technology theory. The core text of the book is a manifesto by the collective Laboria Cuboniks, expanded with selected canonical technofeminist voices. Contributions include: Rosi Braidotti: Cyberfeminism with a Difference, Laboria Cuboniks: Manifesto Xenofeminism, Shulamith Firestone: Feminism and Ecology, Donna Haraway: Femaleman meets Oncomouse, Nina Power: Woman-Machines: On the Future of Female Noise Music, Paul B. Preciado: Excerpt from Testo Junkie, Alexandra Pirici & Raluca Voinea: A Manifesto for the Gynocene, Lisa Nakamura: Racism, Sexism, and the Cruel Optimism in Gaming.

Key specifications

Language
German
Author
Helen HesterJennifer Sophia TheodorLaboria CuboniksShulamith FirestoneStephan Geene
Year
2015
Number of pages
160

General information

Item number
8689487
Publisher
Merve
Category
Reference books
Release date
16.6.2015

Book properties

Language
German
Author
Helen HesterJennifer Sophia TheodorLaboria CuboniksShulamith FirestoneStephan Geene
Year
2015
Number of pages
160
Edition
1

Voluntary climate contribution

CO₂ emissions
0,15 kg
Climate contribution
EUR 0,12

Product dimensions

Height
170 mm
Width
121 mm
Weight
141 g

14-day cancellation right
30-day right of return if unopened
24 Months statutory warranty
Legal concerns

Compare products

Goes with

Reviews & Ratings

Statutory warranty score

How often does a product of this brand in the «Reference books» category have a defect within the first 24 months?

Source: Galaxus
  • Merve
    Not enough data
  • 1.Anaconda
    0 %
  • 1.Ariston
    0 %
  • 1.Avery Publishing Group
    0 %
  • 1.Beltz
    0 %

Statutory warranty case duration

How many working days on average does it take to process a warranty claim from when it arrives at the service centre until it’s back with the customer?

Source: Galaxus
  • Merve
    Not enough data
  • An der Ruhr
    Not enough data
  • Anaconda
    Not enough data
  • Ariston
    Not enough data
  • Avery Publishing Group
    Not enough data

Unfortunately, we don't have enough data for this category yet.

Return rate

How often is a product of this brand in the «Reference books» category returned?

Source: Galaxus
  • Merve
    Not enough data
  • 1.Avery Publishing Group
    0 %
  • 1.Beltz
    0 %
  • 1.Hachette
    0 %
  • 1.Hanser
    0 %
Source: Galaxus