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25Viral queerings, amplified vulnerabilitiesIn Jussi Koitela & Yvonne Billimor (eds.), Rehearsing Hospitalities Companion 2, . pp. 155-172. 2020.From Editors' Introduction: "With our invitation to turn over (re-turn) hospitality in these times Marietta Radomska’s response combines her own research within the emerging field of Queer Death Studies6 with a detailed reading of the coronavirus disease pandemic. In her essay, “Viral queerings, amplified vulnerabilities”, Marietta seeks to subvert normative and simplified understandings of our present. Following the thread that the pandemic affects some bodies more than others, Marietta highlig…Read more
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100Methodologies of Kelp: On Feminist Posthumanities, Transversal Knowledge Production and Multispecies Ethics in an Age of EntanglementIn and A. Wolfsberger N. Cahoon H. Mehti (ed.), The Kelp Congress. pp. 11-23. 2020.We take kelp as material entities immersed in a multitude of relations with other creatures (for whom kelp serves as both nourishment and shelter) and inorganic elements of the milieu it resides in, on the one hand, and as a figuration: a material-semiotic “map of contestable worlds” that encompasses entangled threads of “knowledge, practice and power” (Haraway 1997, 11) in its local and global sense, on the other. While drawing on our field notes from the congress and feminist posthumanities an…Read more
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97The ‘Animal Question’ has occupied Western philosophy for more than a decade now. Whether inspired by the rising urgency of the problem of violence towards and exploitation of nonhuman animals perpetuated by science, technology and culture broadly speaking, or by an enthralment with otherness, an increasing number of theorists engage with the concepts of the animal and human–nonhuman relations. These notions become an incessant impetus for creative and critical inquiry and the exploration of phi…Read more
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133Posthuman Ecologies of the Corpse. (review)Women, Gender and Research 28 124-126. 2019.Erin E. Edwards’ "The Modernist Corpse: Posthumanism and the Posthumous" offers a unique study of the critical and creative potential of the corpse in the context of (primarily) American modernist literature and other media. Dead bodies, oftentimes “radically dehumanized” (p. 1) and depicted en masse in direct relation to atrocities of colonialism, slavery and World War I, populate modernist literature and art. While many literary theorist wh…Read more
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85Elämästä luopuminen -Biofilosofiasta, epä/elämisestä, toksisesta ruumiillistumisesta ja etiikan uudelleenmuotoilustaNiin and Näin 1 39-46. 2020.Elämä tavataan nähdä kuoleman vastakohtana. Tällaisen kahtiajaon ulkopuolelle mahtuu kuitenkin paljon ontologisia ja eettisiä kysymyksiä, joita on lähdettävä purkamaan toisesta suunnasta. Marietta Radomska ja Cecilia Åsberg ehdottavat suunnaksi biofilosofiaa, jossa elämistä ja kuolemista tarkastellaan yhteen kietoutuneina ja yhdessä muuttuvina.
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13Posthumanist Pedagogies: Toward an Ethics of the Non/LivingJournal of Curriculum and Pedagogy 10 (1): 28-31. 2013.Performed not only within the interdisciplinary field of gender studies, feminist pedagogy since the 1980s has drawn attention to the significance of power differentials (gender, race, class, etc.), one’s location, and diversity of personal experience as crucial factors weaved into the practices of teaching, education, and knowledge production in general. Contemporary feminist theory has put a special emphasis on the redefinition of matter as agential, non-inert, and always already entangled wit…Read more
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209What do we talk about when we talk about queer death? Theories and definitionsWhatever: A Transdisciplinary Journal of Queer Theories and Studies 4 573-598. 2021.This is part 1 of 6 of the dossier What Do We Talk about when We Talk about Queer Death?, edited by M. Petricola. The contributions collected in this article sit at the crossroads between thanatology and queer theory and tackle questions such as: how can we define queer death studies as a research field? How can queer death studies problematize and rethink the life-death binary? Which notions and hermeneutic tools could be borrowed from other disciplines in order to better define queer death stu…Read more
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108Fathoming Postnatural Oceans: Towards a low trophic theory in the practices of feminist posthumanitiesEnvironment and Planning E: Nature and Space 4 1-18. 2021.As the planet’s largest ecosystem, oceans stabilise climate, produce oxygen, store CO2 and host unfathomable biodiversity at a deep time-scale. In recent decades, scientific assessments have indicated that the oceans are seriously degraded to the detriment of most near-future societies. Human-induced impacts range from climate change, ocean acidification, loss of biodiversity, eutrophication and marine pollution to local degradation of marine and coastal environments. Such environmental violence…Read more
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143Missing Links and Non/Human Queerings: an IntroductionSomatechnics 5 (2): 113-119. 2015.In recent years, questions regarding the ontological status of the human have been raised with renewed interest and imagination within various fields of critical thought. In the face of biotechnological findings and increasingly advanced technologies that connect as well as disturb settled boundaries, whether geographical or bodily, not to mention philosophical questionings of traditional western humanism, the boundaries of the human subject have been contested. The human body, traditionally ima…Read more
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21Doing Away with Life: On Biophilosophy, the Non/Living, Toxic Embodiment, and Reimagining EthicsIn Erich Berger, Kasperi Mäki-Reinikka, Kira O'Reilly & Helena Sederholm (eds.), Art As We Don’t Know It. pp. 54-63. 2020.In this chapter we argue for biophilosophy as a queerfeminist and posthumanities methodology that attends to the question of life by focusing on multiple differences and transformations, materiality and processuality, as well as relations, intra-actions, and disconnections. By combining both the ontological and ethical concerns that go beyond what is conventionally seen as “life”, biophilosophy offers a critical and innovative approach to the issues of death, extinction, (un) liveability, termin…Read more
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143Non/living Matter, Bioscientific Imaginaries and Feminist Techno-ecologies of BioartAustralian Feminist Studies 32 (94): 377-394. 2017.Bioart is a form of hybrid artistico-scientific practices in contemporary art that involve the use of bio-materials (such as living cells, tissues, organisms) and scientific techniques, protocols, and tools. Bioart-works embody vulnerability (intrinsic to all beings) and depend on (bio)technologies that allow these creations to come into being, endure and flourish but also discipline them. This article focuses on ‘semi-living’ sculptures by The Tissue Culture and Art Project (TC&A). TC&A’s artwo…Read more
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21Promises of Non/Living Monsters and Uncontainable LifeSomatechnics 8 (2): 215-231. 2018.In the Western cultural imaginaries the monstrous is defined – following Aristotelian categorisations – by its excess, deficiency or displacement of organic matter. These characteristics come to the fore in the field of bioart: a current in contemporary art that involves the use of biological materials (various kinds of soma: cells, tissues, organisms), and scientific procedures, technologies, protocols, and tools. Bioartistic projects and objects not only challenge the conventional ideas of emb…Read more
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465Queer Death Studies: Coming to Terms with Death, Dying and Mourning Differently. An IntroductionWomen, Gender and Research 2019 (3-4): 3-11. 2019.Queer Death Studies (QDS) refers to an emerging transdisciplinary field of research that critically and (self) reflexively investigates and challenges conventional normativities, assumptions, expectations, and regimes of truths that are brought to life and made evident by death, dying, and mourning. Since its establishment as a research field in the 1970s, Death Studies has drawn attention to the questions of death, dying, and mourning as complex and multifaceted phenomena that require inter- o…Read more
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93Non/Living Queerings, Undoing Certainties, and Braiding Vulnerabilities: A Collective ReflectionArtnodes 27 1-10. 2021.The ongoing global pandemic of Covid-19 has exposed SARS-CoV-2 as a potent non-human actant that resists the joint scientific, public health and socio-political efforts to contain and understand both the virus and the illness. Yet, such a narrative appears to conceal more than it reveals. The seeming agentiality of the novel coronavirus is itself but one manifestation of the continuous destruction of biodiversity, climate change, socio-economic inequalities, neocolonialism, overconsumption and t…Read more
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34Uncontainable Life : A Biophilosophy of BioartDissertation, Linköping University. 2016.Uncontainable Life: A Biophilosophy of Bioart investigates the ways in which thinking through the contemporary hybrid artistico-scientific practices of bioart is a biophilosophical practice, one that contributes to a more nuanced understanding of life than we encounter in mainstream academic discourse. When examined from a Deleuzian feminist perspective and in dialogue with contemporary bioscience, bioartistic projects reveal the inadequacy of asking about life’s essence. They expose the enmeshm…Read more
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17Queer Death Studies: Death, Dying and Mourning from a Queerfeminist PerspectiveAustralian Feminist Studies 35 (104): 81-100. 2020.This introduction to the Queer Death Studies special issue explores an emerging transdisciplinary field of research. This field critically, reflexively and affirmatively investigates and challenges conventional normativities, assumptions, expectations, and regimes of truths that are brought to life and made evident by current planetary scale necropolitics and its framing of death, dying and mourning in the contemporary world. It is set against the background of traditional engagements with the q…Read more
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25Towards a Posthuman Collective 1 : Ontology, Ep istemology and EthicsPraktyka Teoretyczna 1 94. 2010.The article aims at reconstructing ontological, epistemological, and ethical frames of the posthumanist project, while drawing on the philosophies of Karen Barad, Deleuze and Guattari, and Donna Haraway. Only by defining such theoretical premises of the project one may be able to ask about and think a posthumanist collective and posthumanist politics.
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14The anthropocene, practices of storytelling, and multispecies justiceAngelaki 22 (2): 257-261. 2017.
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87Deterritorialising Death: Queerfeminist Biophilosophy and Ecologies of the Non/Living in Contemporary ArtAustralian Feminist Studies 35 (104). 2020.In the contemporary context of environmental crises and the degradation of resources, certain habitats become unliveable, leading to the death of individuals and species extinction. Whilst bioscience emphasises interdependency and relationality as crucial characteristics of life shared by all organisms, Western cultural imaginaries tend to draw a thick dividing line between humans and nonhumans, particularly evident in the context of death. On the one hand, death appears as a process common to a…Read more
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38Minimal Ethics for the Anthropocene (review)philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 5 (2): 315-317. 2015.
Linköping, Östergötland County, Sweden
Areas of Specialization
3 more
Visual Arts |
Poststructuralism |
Cultural Studies |
Continental Feminism |
Poststructural Feminism |
Gender Studies |
Arts and Humanities, Misc |
Critical Theory |