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Donna J. Haraway
University of California, Santa Cruz Professor in History of Consciousness Oakes College |
4th European Feminist Research Conference
4a Conferenza Europea di Ricerca Femminista |
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EMPLOYMENT HISTORY
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1971 - 74 Assistant Professor, Department of General Science and New College, University of Hawaii
1970 - 71 Acting Assistant Professor, Department of General Science and New College, University of Hawaii 1968 - 70 Teaching Assistant, Department of Biology, Yale University Visiting Appointments: Quigley Distinguished Professor, 3-day faculty development workshop on my work, Smith College, January 21 - 23, 1993 EDUCATION 1972 Ph. D., Yale University, Department of Biology 1969 M. Phil., Yale University, Department of Biology 1968 Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, Summer 1966-67 Faculté des Sciences, Université de Paris, and Foundation Teilhard de Chardin, Paris Fulbright Fellowship in history and philosophy of science 1966 B. A., The Colorado College PROFESSIONAL COMPETENCE AND ACTIVITY Honors, Awards, Grants 1999-2000 Academic Senate Faculty Research Grant 1999 Ludwik Fleck Book Prize, Society of Social Studies of Science, Best Book in the Field, Annual Prize 1999 Invited to accept medal of the Presidency of the Italian Senate at the XXV Pio Manzu International Conference, October 17 (unable to attend) 1998 Induction into the UCSC Chapter of Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society 1997-98 Academic Senate Faculty Research Grant 1996-97 Excellence in Teaching Award, UCSC 1995-96 University Research Lecturer, UCSC 1994 Fellow (non-resident), UC Humanities Research Institute, seminar on "Reinventing Nature," winter-spring 1992 Robert K. Merton Award, American Sociological Association, Science, Knowledge and Technology Section, for Primate Visions: Gender, Race, and Nature in the World of Modern Science (New York and London: Routledge, 1989; London: Verso, 1992) 1992 American Book Award, Before Columbus Foundation, for Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature (London: Free Association Books and New York: Routledge, 1991) (German edition under contract with Campus Verlag, Frankfurt) 1991 Fellow, The UC Humanities Institute, Project on the Human Genome Initiative, winter 1990 Gustav Meyers Human Rights Award for Primate Visions: Gender, Race, and Nature in the World of Modern Science (New York: Routledge, 1989; London: Verso, 1992) 1989 Bay Area Book Reviewers Association Award in Non-fiction, nominated for Primate Visions: Gender, Race, and Nature in the World of Modern Science (New York: Routledge, 1989; London: Verso, 1992) 1988-89 Seed Money Grant, Divisions of Graduate Studies and Research 1988-89 Research Grant, Cultural Studies Center 1987-88 Member, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, N.J. 1986 Doctor of Letters, The Colorado College 1984- Fellow, The Humanities Institute, (from 1989, the Western Humanities Conference) 1981-93 Various Faculty Research Grants from Academic Senate, Feminist Studies FRA, and High Technology and Society FRA, UCSC 1981-82 Instructional Improvement Grant (with Richard Gordon and Barbara Epstein) Listed: Who's Who in California, Who's Who in the West, Who’s Who in America, Who’s Who in the World (12th edition), Two Thousand Notable American Women (5th edition) Visiting Professorships and Summer Institutes 1998 Visiting Distinguished Professor, Ashworth Centre for Social Theory, University of Melbourne, Australia, March 15-27 1997 Distinguished Visiting Professor, Dutch Summer School in Science and Technology Studies, combined gradute programs of The Netherlands, September 1-4 1994 "Cyborg Festival," De Balie Center for Culture and Politics, Amsterdam, and Visiting Distinguished Professor, University of Utrecht, November 26-30 1993 Quigley Distinguished Professor, 3-day faculty development workshop on my work, Smith College, Jan. 21-23 1992 Rockefeller Humanist in Residence, University of Arizona, Nov. 10-12 1992 Visiting Researcher and Lecturer, Center for Technology and Culture, Oslo, Norway, 26 April to 8 May 1991 National Endowment for the Humanities, Summer Institute on Science as Cultural Practice, Wesleyan University, |