Tuesday, September 7, 2010
proud member of cyberspace since 1992

About Me

I work as the Manager of Information Systems for a law firm in downtown Fort Lauderdale. I'm also an independent researcher with a PhD in political science from the University of Minnesota. When the mood strikes, I study and write about political theory, international relations, critical cultural studies, democracy and cyberspace. I maintain this site so that former and future colleagues have a place to find my work. Thank you for visiting. --Diana


Current Interests

Xena uber fanfic, Internet widgets, disaster recovery, and finding ways to promote democracy.


What I'm Doing Now

I'm learning digital video editing and sound mixing. I'm also working on a large writing project with enough material for three novels. The Internet, rhubarb, cooking contests, and modern society feature prominently. Stay tuned.


MLA Award Winning Book

Visit this site for information about my book Cybering Democracy: Public Space and the Internet, winner of the Modern Language Association's prize for 2002 books by Independent Scholars. The site includes detailed chapter summaries and a list of issues explored in the book, which makes it a useful reference for teachers and students.

Cybering Democracy


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    Queen Elizabeth Portrait Mystery Solved

    March 9th, 2007 by Diana

    Ten years ago, I wrote an article called “Gendering Sovereignty: Marriage and International Relations in Elizabethan Times.” While researching that project, I came across a little known portrait of Elizabeth that seemed to depict her as a weary mortal with death hanging over her shoulder. It was a haunting image and so unlike the stylized representation of sovereign power in her other portraits that I couldn’t forget it.

    I posted a page on my website asking for help identifying the portrait and its location. I didn’t even know the name. All I had to go by was a bad xerox copy.

    I recently got the information I’ve been wanting, so for me, the mystery is finally solved. I’ve revised my portrait-mystery page to include the information and added two better scans of the painting. I’ve also discovered that Elizabethan and Tudor history buffs exist out there who might enjoy knowing about this portrait, so I’m sharing the knowledge. If anyone has a better scan or knows where a litho of this can be purchased, please comment or email me.

    Posted in General | 1 Comment »