The facility views her individuality—her blackness, her queerness, and her refusal to follow their rigid code—as "trash in the bag" that must be emptied.
In a near-future dystopian society, a "Dirty Computer" is anyone who refuses to assimilate—those whose identities are deemed "bugs" by a totalitarian regime called the New Dawn.
She remembers a world filled with vibrant, "pastel-colored" defiance. She recalls late-night parties, high-fashion rebellion, and her deep, polyamorous connection with her lovers, Zen and Ché .
The facility views her individuality—her blackness, her queerness, and her refusal to follow their rigid code—as "trash in the bag" that must be emptied.
In a near-future dystopian society, a "Dirty Computer" is anyone who refuses to assimilate—those whose identities are deemed "bugs" by a totalitarian regime called the New Dawn.
She remembers a world filled with vibrant, "pastel-colored" defiance. She recalls late-night parties, high-fashion rebellion, and her deep, polyamorous connection with her lovers, Zen and Ché .