Simone Arlene Browne (born 1973) is an author and educator. She is on the faculty at the University of Texas at Austin,[1] and the author of Dark Matters: On the Surveillance of Blackness.
Early life and education
Browne was born in 1973,[2] and grew up in Toronto, Ontario, where she received a BA (with honors), MA, and PhD at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education in the Department of Sociology and Equity Studies at the University of Toronto.[3] Her 2001 Masters thesis was titled Surveilling the Jamaican body, leisure imperialism, immigration and the Canadian imagination.[2] Her doctoral dissertation in 2007 was titled Trusted travellers: the identity-industrial complex, race and Canada's permanent resident card.[4]
Career
Browne is a professor of Black Studies in the Department of African and African Diaspora Studies at the University of Texas at Austin.[1] Her most recent book, Dark Matters: On the Surveillance of Blackness, published by Duke University Press in 2015, presents a case to consider race and blackness as a central to the field of surveillance studies, and investigates the roots of present-day surveillance in practices originating in slavery and the Jim Crow era.[5][6] Javier Arbona of the University of California, Davis, said "her wholly original scholarship best captures new kinds of thinking and theorizing in surveillance studies".[7]
She is a member of Deep Lab, a "congress of cyber-feminist researchers."[8]
She is also on the executive board of HASTAC, a virtual organization led by a dynamic Steering Committee consisting of innovators from a variety of disciplines.[9]
Her work, "Not Only Will I Stare," involves the curation of an exhibit about surveillance through black women artists at the University of Texas at Austin.[10] The exhibit "used the space to showcase selected artists and artwork which reflect the intersections and evolving history of surveillance and the Black community."[11]
Awards, honors
Presidential Visiting Fellow for the 2018–2019 academic year, Yale University[10]
Winner of the 2016 Best Book Prize, Surveillance Studies Network[12]
^McGlotten, Shaka (2017-01-01). "Dark Matters: On the Surveillance of Blackness by Simone Browne". American Journal of Sociology. 122 (4): 1305–1307. doi:10.1086/689272. ISSN0002-9602.