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Marjorie Franklin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Marjorie Franklin is an American conceptual artist and a Professor of Conceptual Art at University of Minnesota in the U.S.A. She uses digital media in interactive installations. Previously, she has worked on CD-ROMs such as "Digital Blood", an interactive narrative comparing two mothers who create an artificial life construct and "She Loves It, She Loves It Not:Women and Technology" (a collaboration with Paul Tompkins, the late Christine Tamblyn and others).[1] In the interactive computer audio and video installations she creates her work focuses on the implications of the culture of computer technology for humans living in industrialised countries.

Christine Tamblyn once mentioned in a review[2] that Franklin had been influenced by the Cyborg theory of Donna Haraway.

References

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  1. ^ Tamblyn, Christine (1995). "She Laves It, She Loves It Not: Women and Technology, an Interactive CD-ROM". Leonardo. 28 (2): 99–104. doi:10.2307/1576130. ISSN 1530-9282. JSTOR 1576130. S2CID 146857103.
  2. ^ Art Moves 2003. Archived July 20, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
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