Difference between revisions of "Laboria Cuboniks"

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* Armen Avanessian, Suhail Malik, [http://dismagazine.com/blog/81953/laboria-cuboniks-in-conversation/ "Laboria Cuboniks in Conversation"], ''DIS Magazine'', 23 Jul 2016.
 
* Armen Avanessian, Suhail Malik, [http://dismagazine.com/blog/81953/laboria-cuboniks-in-conversation/ "Laboria Cuboniks in Conversation"], ''DIS Magazine'', 23 Jul 2016.
 
* Cornelia Sollfrank, Rachel Baker, [http://www.furtherfield.org/features/interviews/revisiting-future-laboria-cuboniks-conversation "Revisiting the Future with Laboria Cuboniks. A Conversation"], ''Furtherfield'', 27 Jul 2016.
 
* Cornelia Sollfrank, Rachel Baker, [http://www.furtherfield.org/features/interviews/revisiting-future-laboria-cuboniks-conversation "Revisiting the Future with Laboria Cuboniks. A Conversation"], ''Furtherfield'', 27 Jul 2016.
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* Francis Tseng, [http://thenewinquiry.com/features/particular-universals/ "Particular Universals"], ''The New Inquiry'', 22 Dec 2016. Interview with Helen Hester.
  
 
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Revision as of 23:02, 25 December 2016

Laboria Cuboniks (b. 2014) is a xenofeminist collective, spread across five countries and three continents. She seeks to dismantle gender, destroy ‘the family,’ and do away with nature as a guarantor for inegalitarian political positions. Her name is an anagram of ‘Nicolas Bourbaki’, a pseudonym under which a group of largely French mathematicians worked towards an affirmation of abstraction, generality and rigour in mathematics in the early twentieth century.

Publications
Interviews
Links