These Dudes Fucking Love Minority Report is a micro short story published in HAD.
Author: Deanna Day
Living With Worlds (As They End)
Essay, Exhibit, Short StoryLiving With Worlds (As They End) is a collaborative, multidisciplinary exhibition mounted between January and May 2021. It features the work of Nancy Campbell, Darlene Farris-Labar, Yvonne Love, Gabrielle Russomagno, Britt Dahlberg, and myself.
Living With Worlds (As They End) was originally intended to be mounted as an on-site exhibition at the Madelon Powers Gallery at East Stroudsburg University, but was instead mounted online. The full catalogue is available to view or download as PDF, or as physical copy.
My contributions to the collaboration include five pieces of flash fiction that were written in direct response to individual pieces created by my co-collaborators. I also designed the exhibition’s catalogue, and wrote its introductory essay.
‘As Modern as Tomorrow’: The Medicine Cabinet
Book Chapter“‘As Modern as Tomorrow’: The Medicine Cabinet” is a chapter in Boxes: A Field Guide, a volume edited by Susanne Bauer, Martina Schlünder, and Maria Rentetzi for Mattering Press (2020).
If It’s Tuesday, This Must Be Batuu
EssayIf It’s Tuesday, This Must Be Batuu
Contingent Magazine
December 5, 2019
Interview with Rebecca Onion
InterviewAn interview with Rebecca Onion about her research, her career, and her new book, Innocent Experiments: Childhood And The Culture Of Popular Science In The United States.
Society for the History of Children and Youth Podcast
June 19, 2019
Review: Innocent Experiments
ReviewReview: Innocent Experiments: Childhood and the Culture of Popular Science in the United States by Rebecca Onion
Journal of American History
[Preprint PDF]
September 2018
Their Baby is a Bomb
EssayTheir Baby is a Bomb
Picturing Meteorology
June 18, 2018
The Queer Future of “Annihilation”
EssayThe Queer Future of “Annihilation”
Lady Science
June 4, 2018
Bonkers Things Men Have Said About Women’s Bodies
InterviewBonkers Things Men Have Said About Women’s Bodies, A History
Lady Science podcast
April 16, 2018
Robots are Better People than Mark Zuckerberg
EssayRobots are Better People than Mark Zuckerberg
Lady Science
April 12, 2018
The Historian’s Laboratory
EventThe Historian’s Laboratory: The Beckman Legacy in the Caltech Archives
Panelist
Caltech Archives
April 5, 2018
To Boldy Go Where No Series Had Gone Before
InterviewTo Boldy Go Where No Series Had Gone Before
Lady Science podcast
February 14, 2018
The Sum of Our Programming
EssayThe Sum of Our Programming: Finding Humanity in Emotional Labor
Lady Science
February 4, 2018
The History of Data is the History of Labor
EssayThe History of Data is the History of Labor
Lady Science
July 2, 2017
Picturing the Future
ExhibitPicturing the Future
Curator
Science History Institute
June 26 – September 21, 2017
History Lab
EventHistory Lab
Program co-developer and seminar leader
Science History Institute
Summer 2017
My Data, My Self
EventMy Data, My Self: A Century of Self-Tracking Health Technologies
Panelist
Science History Institute
May 25, 2017
Infrastructures of Hope
EventInfrastructures of Hope: Taking Care of Medicine in Southern California
Lecturer
Science History Institute
April 3, 2017
Bringing the Drugstore Home
InterviewBringing the Drugstore Home: Patient labor, scientific medicine, and the development of the medicine cabinet
An Interview with Deanna Day
Cabinet
Winter 2015-2016
Exercise Without Failure
EssayExercise without Failure: Building Fitness Apps as Narrative Games
Model View Culture
April 29, 2015
Reinventing the Safe Period
EventReinventing the Safe Period: The Contested History of Fertility Charting
Lecturer
Dittrick Museum of Medical History
April 9, 2015
Babies on Demand
InterviewBabies on Demand: Reproduction in a Technological Age
Distillations
November 18, 2014
98.6: Fevers, Fertility, & the Patient Labor of American Medicine
DissertationDoctoral Dissertation:
98.6: Fevers, Fertility, and the Patient Labor of American Medicine [Full Text PDF]
History & Sociology of Science, University of Pennsylvania
Abstract:
How to Tell If You’re Dead
EssayA Short Bio of the Medicine Cabinet
EventA Short Biography of the Medicine Cabinet
Lecturer
Philadelphia Nerd Nite
April 9, 2014
Toward a Zombie Epistemology
Peer-reviewedToward a Zombie Epistemology: What it Means to Live and Die in Cabin in the Woods
Ada: A Journal of Gender, New Media, and Technology
November 2013
…Stop Worrying and Love the Zombie Apocalypse
InterviewHow We Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Zombie Apocalypse [Audio Only]
Distillations
Science History Institute
October 21, 2013
Zombies in the Laboratory
EssayZombies in the Laboratory
Periodic Tabloid (part of a three-part series)
September 24, 2013
[Note: The blog where this series was originally published is no longer online. Below is the original text of the post.]
Zombies in the Country
EssayZombies in the Country
Periodic Tabloid (part of a three-part series)
August 29, 2013
[Note: The blog where this series was originally published is no longer online. Below is the original text of the post.]
Zombies in the Sugar Mill
EssayZombies in the Sugar Mill
Periodic Tabloid (part of a three-part series)
August 22, 2013
[Note: The blog where this series was originally published is no longer online. Below is the original text of the post.]
So Argon Walks Into a Bar…
InterviewSo Argon Walks Into a Bar…
Distillations
March 4, 2013
Harry Potter & How We Let Technology Create Who We Are
EssayHarry Potter, Wizards and How We Let Technology Create Who We Are
Popmatters
August 16, 2012
Eastern State Penitentiary, 1929-1971
ReviewReview: Eastern State Penitentiary, 1929-1971
British Society for the History of Science Travel Guide to Scientific Sites
June 18, 2012
[Note: The formatting of the original publication has been broken. For legibility, the text of the review is posted below.]
A Zombie’s History of Medicine & Tech
TeachingHSOC 141: A Zombie’s History of Medicine and Technology
Instructor
University of Pennsylvania
Course Description:
Dialogues with Darwin
ExhibitDialogues with Darwin
Curatorial Intern
April 17, 2009 – October 17, 2010