Caren Kaplan | |
Nationality: | American |
Work Institution: | University of California at Davis University of California at Berkeley Georgetown University |
Alma Mater: | University of California at Santa Cruz |
Known For: | transnational feminism |
Influences: | James Clifford Donna Haraway |
Caren Kaplan is professor emerita of American Studies at University of California at Davis,[1] and a figure in the academic discipline of women's studies. Together with Inderpal Grewal, Kaplan has worked as a founder of the field of transnational feminist cultural studies or transnational feminism.[2]
Kaplan is a proponent of the digital humanities and has turned the critical lens of cultural studies upon topics such as travel, visual culture, militarization and the construction of consumer subjects. Her book Questions of Travel is about the development of a social science attentive to the role of travel and mobility in everyday life and contemporary culture.[3] Along with figures such as Lisa Parks, Kaplan has expanded feminist studies of technology and infrastructure through her work on aerial imagery and mapping, the Global Positioning System (GPS), and the rise of drones and remote sensing technologies in warfare and policing.[4]
Kaplan graduated from Hampshire College in 1977 with a degree in social theory and received her Ph.D. in 1987 from the History of Consciousness program at the University of California at Santa Cruz. She wrote her dissertation, The Poetics of Displacement: Exile, Immigration, and Travel in Contemporary Autobiographical Writing, under the direction of James Clifford, Donna Haraway, and Teresa de Lauretis.[5] Before accepting her position at UC Davis, Kaplan held teaching appointments at the University of California Berkeley and Georgetown University. In 2006–2007, she won the Digital Innovation Fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies.[6] Kaplan was the founder of the Designated Emphasis on Women, Gender and Sexuality[7] at UC Berkeley when she was a professor there and influenced scholars such as Mimi Thi Nguyen, Vernadette Vicuna Gonzalez, and Jasbir Puar. At UC Davis, Kaplan founded the interdisciplinary Critical Militarization, Policing, and Security Studies (CRTMIL), a working group for the study of emergent and everyday practices and technologies of state power.[8] There she influenced scholars such as Toby Beauchamp, Liz Montegary, Abigail Boggs, Tristan Josephson, and Andrea Miller.