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attackeng.jpg Zuska is the kick-ass alter-ego of Suzanne E Franks. When not dispensing Zuska's wisdom, Suzanne can often be found gardening, reading, or having one of her thrice-weekly migraines.

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19 Questions With Zuska

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The place where I come from...is a small town. Coalfields of the Appalachian Mountains

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You will be wanting to read my excellent essay, 'Suzy the Computer' vs. 'Dr. Sexy': What's a Geek Girl to Do When She Wants to Get Laid? in She's Such a Geek! Women Write About Science, Technology, and Other Nerdy Stuff.

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If you have not yet figured out why you shoud not be using terms like "hard science" and "soft skills", then you absolutely need to read Telling Stories About Engineering: Group Dynamics and Resistance to Diversity in NWSA Journal v. 16 No. 1, 2004 (Re)Gendering Science Fields.

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You should also read They Blinded Me With Science: Misuse and Misunderstanding of Biological Theory, an excellent critique of Thornhill and Palmer's nonsense about rape as an evolutionary strategy. You can find it in Burack and Josephson's must-read tome, Fundamental Differences: Feminists Talk Back to Social Conservatives.

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Support the Mautner Project for Lesbians With Cancer! "The Mautner Project improves the health of lesbians, bisexual, and transgender women who partner with women, and their families, through advocacy, education, research, and direct service. [The Mautner Project envisions] a healthcare system that is guided by social justice and responsive to the needs of all people."

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Links for 6-16-08

Category: Linkfest
Posted on: June 16, 2008 3:28 PM, by Zuska

Some time ago Penny called my attention to this post by Liz Henry regarding the erasure of women from the tech community via language. I loved it, not least because her most excellent rant includes one of my own pet peeves:

All of this just yanks my chain big time, like when people say in talks and demos, "It's so easy, my MOM can do it." (And then everyone in the audience laughs knowingly.) Like moms are the dumbest people ever. My pet peeve at technical conferences. I am a mom!

Preach it, sister.

If you've been wanting a guide to help you parse Christian right anti-gay rhetoric and what it has to do with politics today, look no more. The definitive work is Sin, Sex, and Democracy: Antigay Rhetoric and the Christian Right by Cynthia Burack. This is not a dry scholarly tome, nor is it written in academese. Very readable and unexpectedly humorous in places, it is informative and timely.

I should have blogged this back in April, but Fairer Science has a new section on building web communities. It includes a section on using women in science blogs to encourage young girls in science.

How's your bias literacy? Ruta Sevo and Daryl Chubin have put together a primer of sorts. You can download it here.

The 2008 WEPAN conference proceedings can be found here.

That's all for now. I hope you'll find some or all of these interesting!

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Comments

1

Though i've heard alot, i've not heard "mom could do it". It would offend me, and i'm a guy, and i'm not easily offended. Like many, i have a Mom too.

I have used a line that starts "It's so easy...". But it ends with "even I can do it." Self deprecating humor is my favorite, though irony, sarcasm, stunning understatement, and, well, puns, are up there too.

My current favorite physics joke: "I was driving down the road and looked down and the speedometer for my exact speed. All of a sudden, i had no idea where i was."

Posted by: Stephen | June 16, 2008 5:00 PM

2

My son, through the course of his (recently completed) post-secondary studies in electronics, instrumentation, and robotics, thoroughly enjoyed the reactions he got when he would mention to his teachers that he had learned soldering and digital logic from his mother.

Posted by: Theo Bromine | June 19, 2008 10:35 PM

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