39 research outputs found

    Introduction to “Binary Binds”: Deconstructing Sex and Gender Dichotomies in Archaeological Practice

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    YesGender archaeology has made significant strides toward deconstructing the hegemony of binary categorizations. Challenging dichotomies such as man/woman, sex/gender, and biology/culture, approaches informed by poststructuralist, feminist, and queer theories have moved beyond essentialist and universalist identity constructs to more nuanced configurations. Despite the theoretical emphasis on context, multiplicity, and fluidity, binary starting points continue to streamline the spectrum of variability that is recognized, often reproducing normative assumptions in the evidence. The contributors to this special issue confront how sex, gender, and sexuality categories condition analytical visibility, aiming to develop approaches that respond to the complexity of theory in archaeological practice. The papers push the ontological and epistemological boundaries of bodies, personhood, and archaeological possibility, challenging a priori assumptions that contain how sex, gender, and sexuality categories are constituted and related to each other. Foregrounding intersectional approaches that engage with ambiguity, variability, and difference, this special issue seeks to “de-contain” categories, assumptions, and practices from “binding” our analytical gaze toward only certain kinds of persons and knowledges, in interpretations of the past and practices in the present

    Growth conditions for carbon-infiltrated carbon nanotubes induce corrosion sensitization in 316L stainless steel

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    Carbon Infiltrated Carbon Nanotubes (CICNTs) show promise as a surface modification for medical devices and implants due to their potential structural resistance to bacterial colonization. However, when 316L stainless steel is used as the substrate for CICNT growth, the steel loses its passivating layer and experiences oxidative corrosion when placed in an aqueous physiological environment. This effect, confirmed by both energy dispersive x-ray analysis and electrochemical potentiokinetic reactivation, may be attributed to carburization of the alloy during CICNT production. One potential solution to this problem was investigated by employing an indirect CICNT growth method that utilized protective thin films under the CICNT surface and a nitrocellulose-based coating on other exposed edges. Samples that had been thus treated exhibited no significant corrosion over a 48 h testing period
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