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QTKO

QTKO@books.solarpunk.moe

Joined 1 year, 5 months ago

Indie game developer from Sacramento, CA. I mostly read non-fiction.

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QTKO's books

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Toby Beauchamp: Going Stealth (2019, Duke University Press) 5 stars

In Going Stealth Toby Beauchamp demonstrates how the enforcement of gender conformity is linked to …

A must-read on the crossroads between US government surveillance and trans identity

5 stars

This book is a fantastic read. It's a little dense, and the chapter on mid-2010s transphobic bathroom bills is definitely padded for page length, but otherwise it's excellent.

Beauchamp's basic idea is that our medical-legal framework pushes trans folks to "fully transition" - which is to say, to eventually read as cisgender and erase any signs of transness. At the same time, it requires a paper trail of documents that prevent a trans person from fully assimilating in the eyes of the law; there has to always be some record of a trans person's previous life. It's a contradiction that shows the true nature of trans-directed policy: to categorize people between the compliant model citizen and the suspicious other. And as you can imagine, this creates complex issues when transness is cast along the lines of race, class, and disability.

Did you know that photo ID laws started with the …

finished reading Going Stealth by Toby Beauchamp

Toby Beauchamp: Going Stealth (2019, Duke University Press) 5 stars

In Going Stealth Toby Beauchamp demonstrates how the enforcement of gender conformity is linked to …

This was a really good book! It's a bit academic, and the section on mid-2010s transphobic bathroom bills has a bit more fluff then content. But otherwise... wow. Writing my review rn.

Fred Turner: From Counterculture to Cyberculture (2008, University Of Chicago Press) No rating

In the early 1960s, computers haunted the American popular imagination. Bleak tools of the cold …

Still in the middle of reading this. Really interesting how the modern Silicon Valley ethos goes all the way back to hippies experimenting with new tech as a means of counterculture. Honestly, you can track the Fediverse back to here. That's not always a good thing, though - the book goes over how this ethos was appropriated in the 90s.

Based on what I've read so far, you really need to read this with a critical eye. It's a tragic story, but the author doesn't seem to be aware of it. It's also overfocused on one guy, Stewart Brand, despite the movement being bigger than him. It's a good read, but be aware that it has its flaws.

Maybe I'll leave a full review when I finish it.