#SEGGSED: SEX, SAFETY, AND CENSORSHIP ON TIKTOKMain Menu#SEGGSED: SEX, SAFETY, AND CENSORSHIP ON TIKTOKAuthor BioDEDICATIONABSTRACT OF THE THESIS#SeggsEd: Sex, Safety, and Censorship on TikTok by Mikayla Knight Master of Arts in Women’s Studies San Diego State University, 2022TABLE OF CONTENTSACKNOWLEDGEMENTSSex Worker Pedagogies for Porn LiteracyCHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTIONBackground and Literature ReviewThe Study of PornThe Sex Wars and Sex Work CriminalizationCyberfeminist Design JusticeMethodsCHAPTER 2: HISTORY AND CONTEXTAbout TikTokSexual Moral Panics and the Construction of InnocenceDefining PornographySex Education: A Brief HistoryCompeting Discourses of SafetyCHAPTER 3. DIGITAL VIOLENCEFeminist HackingLearn More About TechnofeminismsSex Education and Chilled SpeechCybersexual Moral PanicsFear-Driven Conceptions of SafetyAlgorithmic White-Supremacist Beauty IdealsCHAPTER 4. TOWARD A NUANCED DEFINITION OF SAFETYImagining Liberated Digital WorldsThe Porn ConversationConclusionResources by/for Sex Workers & AlliesREFERENCESLens: Word CloudMikayla Knight1a410d081ea3baa69433b2b7aa834bddd2a36d7b
Dictionary of Dark Matters
12022-06-29T14:56:38-07:00Mikayla Knight1a410d081ea3baa69433b2b7aa834bddd2a36d7b402233From the School for Poetic Computation: A self-published people's dictionary written over the course of ten weeks during the Summer 2020 session of “Dark Matters: On Blackness, Surveillance and the Whiteness of the Screen.” It is an abundance of poetry, prose, creative writing, personal history and illustration filled with terms we have come across during our time together. The duration of our time together coincided with the COVID-19 pandemic, the ongoing movement for Black Lives (particularly in response to the murder of George Floyd), and the calling out of various academic institutions and places of work (including our own) for their perpetuation of anti-blackness. The class gave us intentional time to tend to ourselves as we contend with this predatory state, to study the material while existing within the systems we are learning to name. The class and culminating publication takes its namesake from Simone Browne's book Dark Matters: On the Surveillance of Blackness, a critical text that address the origins of so many recurring dynamics of power that operate through high technology. Publication designed by Zainab Aliyu (cover in collaboration with American Artist)plain2022-06-29T14:57:26-07:00Mikayla Knight1a410d081ea3baa69433b2b7aa834bddd2a36d7b