Difference between revisions of "Laboria Cuboniks"

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; Interviews
 
; Interviews
 
* 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.
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* Cornelia Sollfrank, Rachel Baker, [http://www.furtherfield.org/revisiting-the-future-with-laboria-cuboniks-a-conversation/ "Revisiting the Future with Laboria Cuboniks. A Conversation"], ''Furtherfield'', 27 Jul 2016.
 +
** "Repensar el futuro con Laboria Cuboniks: Una conversación", in ''Ciberfeminismo. De VNS Matrix a Laboria Cuboniks'', eds. Remedios Zafra and Teresa López-Pellisa, Madrid: Holobionte, 2019. [https://edicionesholobionte.com/2398-2/] {{es}}
 
* Francis Tseng, [http://thenewinquiry.com/features/particular-universals/ "Particular Universals"], ''The New Inquiry'', 22 Dec 2016. Interview with Helen Hester.
 
* Francis Tseng, [http://thenewinquiry.com/features/particular-universals/ "Particular Universals"], ''The New Inquiry'', 22 Dec 2016. Interview with Helen Hester.
 
* Robert Barry, [http://thequietus.com/articles/24298-xenofeminism-helen-hester-interview "Doing Gender: Helen Hester on Xenofeminism"], ''The Quietus'', 31 Mar 2018.
 
* Robert Barry, [http://thequietus.com/articles/24298-xenofeminism-helen-hester-interview "Doing Gender: Helen Hester on Xenofeminism"], ''The Quietus'', 31 Mar 2018.

Revision as of 14:34, 13 October 2019

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.

Members include Diann Bauer, Katrina Burch, Lucca Fraser, Helen Hester, Amy Ireland, and Patricia Reed.

Publications
Presentations
Interviews
Links