Donna haraway

Donna Haraway 1944 Denver, Co

  • professor

    professor
    Became professor and taught history of science and women's studies at University of Hawaii until 1974.
  • dissertation

    "The Search for Organizing Relations- An Organismic Paradigm in 20th Century Developmental Biology"
  • professor

    professor
    Became a professor at Johns Hopkins University, teaching until 1980.
  • joined program

    Joined History of Consciousness Program
  • published work

    published "A Manifesto for Cyborgs: Science, Technology, and Socialist Feminism in the 1980s" video link on A Cyborg Manifesto
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6dv8N1WYHkQ
  • published work

    published "Primate Visions: Gender, Race, and Nature in the World of Modern Science". The main emphasis of this book was on primatology and offered evidence of evolutionary biology of primate and non primate mammals. Stanford suggests that Haraway attacks the community of primatology by suggesting that it is just as every other field of science that it assists in the oppression of genders and adhering to social expectations and rules. Haraway suggests the research is biased towards men
  • published essay

    published "Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature". This essay explains how each have a "destabilizing place in the great western evolutionary, technological, and biological narratives".
  • award

    awarded Ludwik Fleck Prize
  • award

    She was awarded J.D. Bernal Prize for her lifetime of contributions to the community bringing question to feminism within the scientific field.
  • published work

    "The Companion Species Manifesto: Dogs, People, and Significant Others". In this intriguing text, she describes human-animal relations and encounters. She examines lab animals to trained therapy dogs. Haraway describes the interactions of domesticated animals and their human caretakers.
  • published work

    "Making Kin Not Population: Reconceiving Generations". In this work, she denies the two theories that somehow technology that we create can save us from the climate change and raping of our earthly resources. The others is that it's too late for saving, just to continue on our destructive path. Hathaway invites us to invoke a third option which is "staying with the trouble". We should realize the disaster and attempt our best to do better to fix it and maintain a better ecosystem.
  • video speculative fabulation

  • works cited

    O'Neill-Butler, Lauren. “Donna Haraway.” The European Graduate School, Division of Philosophy, Art, and Critical Thought at The European Graduate School, 1994, https://egs.edu/biography/donna-haraway/.
    Woo, Cameron. “When Species Meet.” University of Minnesota Press, 18 Oct. 2021, https://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/books/when-species-meet.