#philtech Regarding localization of theory: in "A Game of Cat's Cradle" H states disrespect for "boundaries of...nations"
Donna J. Hawaray. “A Game of Cat’s Cradle: Sicence studies, Feminist Theory, Cultural Studies.” In Critical Digital Studies: A Reader, edited by Marilouise Kroker Arthur Kroker. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2009.
p.46 Haraway advocates “Feminist, multicultural, anti-racist technoscience projects” because they “do no respect the boundaries of disciplines, institutions, nations or genres. The projects are as likely to be located in computer graphics labs as in community meetings, in biomedical worlds as in antitoxics work”. However, she notes that this “boundary crossing in itself is not very interesting…”, instead, “Technoscience provokes an interest in zones of implosion, more than in boundaries, crossed or not”.