
Gwen D'Arcangelis
Associate Professor and Director of the Gender Studies Program
Office: Ladd Hall 2nd Floor
Telephone: 518-580-8078
Email: gdarcang@skidmore.edu
Courses
- Introduction to Gender Studies
- Feminist Theories and Methodologies
- Senior Seminar in Gender Studies
- Feminist Science Studies
Biography
Gwen DāArcangelis is Associate Professor in Gender Studies at Skidmore College. Her areas of teaching and research include gender, race, and science; feminist science fiction; disease and empire; and feminist and anti-imperial praxis. She has published on the construction of white scientific masculinity in U.S. national security discourse, gendered Orientalism in the U.S. news media during the 2003 SARS disease scare, and nurse activism against the war on terror. She has recently released a book-length manuscript titled Bio-Imperialism: Disease, Terror, and the Construction of National Fragility (description below). She is currently working on a new project exploring Chinese Medicine as a key site for promoting health and wellness among communities of color and other marginalized communities in the United States. She has also been involved in community engagement projects on queer Asian Pacific Islander justice and environmental justice, and has blogged on topics of science justice.
BOOKS
Bio-Imperialism: Disease, Terror, and the Construction of National Fragility ().ā Rutgers University Press, 2020.
More about her current projects .
Publications
- āConfronting public health imperialism: A transnational feminist analysis of critical nurse response to the National Smallpox Vaccination Program of 2002,ā Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies vol 40., no. 1 (2019): 95-121.
- āFraming China: Discourses of Othering in US News and Political Rhetoric,ā with Su-Mei
Ooi, Global Media and China, Feb 8, 2018. .
- āReframing the āSecuritization of Public Healthā: a Critical Race Perspective on Post-9/11
Bioterrorism Preparedness in the U.S.,ā Critical Public Health, 2016, .
- āDefending White Scientific Masculinity: The FBI, the Media and Profiling Tactics
During the Post-9/11 Anthrax Investigation,ā International Feminist Journal of Politics,
June 15, 2015, 1ā20. .
- āEnacting Environmental Justice through the Undergraduate Classroom: the Transformative
Potential of Community Engaged Partnershipsā (with Brinda Sarathy), Journal of Community
Engagement and Scholarship 8, no. 2 (2015): 97-106.
- āSurveillance and Policing in U.S. Bioscienceāproducing transnational Others,ā in
Shifting Positionalities: The Local and International GeoāPolitics of Surveillance
and Policing, ed. by MarĆa Amelia Viteri and Aaron Tobler, Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars
Publishing, 2009.
- āChinese chickens, ducks, pigs and humans, and the Technoscientific Discourses of
Global U.S. Empire,ā in Tactical Biopolitics: Art, Activism, and Technoscience, ed.
by Beatriz da Costa and Kavita Philip, Cambridge: MIT Press, 2008.
- āInterview with Richard Lewontinā (with Beatriz da Costa and Kavita Philip), in Tactical
Biopolitics: Art, Activism, and Technoscience, ed. by Beatriz da Costa and Kavita
Philip, Cambridge: MIT Press, 2008.
- āPrison abolition in practice: The LEAD Project, the politics of healing, and āA New Way of Lifeāā (with Shigematsu, Setsu and Melissa Burch), in Abolition NOW! Ten Years of Strategy and Struggle Against the Prison Industrial Complex, ed. by CR10 Publications Collective, Oakland: AK Press, 2008.