Vids+

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YouTube: http://youtu.be/Klr5z0hoP04?list=RDKlr5z0hoP04
Uploaded on Feb 12, 2008
Queen's Freddie Mercury challenges the crowd during Live Aid Wembley (UK) 1985 concert. 

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Ted Talk: http://www.ted.com/talks/margaret_wertheim_crochets_the_coral_reef?language=en  

"Margaret Wertheim leads a project to re-create the creatures of the coral reefs using a crochet technique invented by a mathematician — celebrating the amazements of the reef, and deep-diving into the hyperbolic geometry underlying coral creation."

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Feminism, Technology, and the Body from FemTechNet on Vimeohttp://vimeo.com/86712529  


FemTechNet is a network of scholars, students, and artists working together through research and education in the humanities and in technology.

For transcripts and captioned versions of the FemTechNet videos, please visit ats-streaming.cites.illinois.edu/digitalmedia/download/femtechnet/embeds.html

See also the FemEdTech Commons at: http://femtechnet.org


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Donna Haraway, "Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Chthulucene: Staying with the Trouble", 5/9/14 from AURA on Vimeo.

Because of its privacy settings I cannot embed this video here, but you can watch it on Vimeo at this link: http://vimeo.com/97663518  

This was a part of the UCSC conference: Anthropocene: Arts for Living on a Damaged Planet. You can find the schedule here: http://scijust.ucsc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/anthropo-may8-1123.pdf  

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More on the khipu, pinned here: http://www.pinterest.com/katkingumd/khipus/  



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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVJA7Y52opw

Published on Nov 19, 2013
In Part 5 of Engineering the Inka Empire: A Symposium on Sustainability and Ancient Technologies, Gary Urton presents Engineering a World with Strings Attached: The Place of the Khipu in Building the Inka Empire. The knotted-string recording device known as the khipu ("knot") was the principal device used for the storage of information by state agents and administrative officials in the Inka Empire of Pre-Columbian South America. This presentation examines the role of khipu record keeping in a variety of contexts relating to the building of state facilities in the empire—from roads to store houses to administrative centers. It is argued that the knotted string hierarchical arrangement of the khipu was important to the Inka not only as an instrument for record keeping but also as a structural paradigm for building the empire.

Gary Urton is the Dumbarton Oaks Professor of Pre-Columbian Studies and Chairman of the Department of Anthropology at Harvard University. His research focuses on a variety of topics in pre-Columbian and early colonial Andean intellectual history, drawing on materials and methods in archaeology, ethnohistory, and ethnology. He is the author of many articles and editor of several volumes on Andean/Quechua cultures and Inka civilization. His books include: The History of a Myth (1990), The Social Life of Numbers (1997), Inca Myths (1999), and Signs of the Inka Khipu (2003). A MacArthur Fellow (2001--2005), he is Founder/Director of the Harvard Khipu Database Project.

This symposium was webcast on November 14, 2013 from the Rasmuson Theater at the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C.
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