BRANDON, launched in June 1998, is a Guggenheim Virtual Museum commission
that entails multi-artist, multi-author, and multi-institutional collaboration.
Set up as an open-ended narrative with four templates of interfaces, BRANDON
explores narrative images and texts in a cross-section between real and
virtual space.
BRANDON derives its title from Brandon/Teena Brandon of Nebraska, USA- a
gender-crossing individual who was raped and murdered after his female anatomy
was revealed.
Taking this case into the environment of gender play and multi identity
of cyberspace, BRANDON extends its case study to include other legal cases
where gender ambiguity constitutes points of interrogation and the verbal/textual
assualt cases on the Net, such as Legba vs. Mr. Bungle, (1993), a cyberrape
case made famous by Village Voice writer Julian Dibble, Jane Doe Vs. Jake
Baker (1995), "alt.sex.stories" postings that call for FBI arrest
of a Michigan University student.
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