Description

Book Synopsis
Cutting-edge historians explore ideas, communities, and technologies around modern computing to explore how computers mediate social relations. Computers have been framed both as a mirror for the human mind and as an irreducible other that humanness is defined against, depending on different historical definitions of humanness. They can serve both liberation and control because some people's freedom has historically been predicated on controlling others. Historians of computing return again and again to these contradictions, as they often reveal deeper structures. Using twin frameworks of abstraction and embodiment, a reformulation of the old mind-body dichotomy, this anthology examines how social relations are enacted in and through computing. The authors examining Abstraction revisit central concepts in computing, including algorithm, program, clone, and risk. In doing so, they demonstrate how the meanings of these terms reflect power relations and social identities. The section

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction. Thinking with Computers
Part I. Abstractions
Chapter 1. Waiting for Midnight: Risk Perception and the Millennium Bug
Chapter 2. Centrists against the Center: The Jeffersonian Politics of a Decentralized Internet
Chapter 3. Beyond the Pale: The Blackbird Web Browser's Critical Reception
Chapter 4. Scientology Online: Copyright Infringement and the Legal Construction of the Internet
Chapter 5. Patenting Automation of Race and Ethnicity Classifications: Protecting Neutral Technology or Disparate Treatment by Proxy?
Chapter 6. "Difficult Things Are Difficult to Describe": The Role of Formal Semantics in European Computer Science, 1960–1980
Chapter 7. What's in a Name? Origins, Transpositions, and Transformations of the Triptych Algorithm–Code–Program
Chapter 8. The Lurking Problem
Chapter 9. The Help Desk: Changing Images of Product Support in Personal Computing, 1975–1990
Chapter 10. Power to the Clones: Hardware and Software Bricolage on the Periphery
Part II: Embodiments
Chapter 11. Indigenous Circuits: Navajo Women and the Racialization of Early Electronic Manufacture
Chapter 12. Inventing the Black Computer Professional
Chapter 13. The Baby and the Black Box: A History of Software, Sexism, and the Sound Barrier
Chapter 14. Computing Nanyang: Information Technology in a Developing Singapore, 1965–1985
Chapter 15. Engineering the Lay Mind: Lev Landa's Algo-Heuristic Theory and Artificial Intelligence
Chapter 16. The Measure of Meaning: Automatic Speech Recognition and the Human-Computer Imagination
Chapter 17. Broken Mirrors: Surveillance in Oakland as Both Reflection and Refraction of California's Carceral State
Chapter 18. Punk Culture and the Rise of the Hacker Ethic
Chapter 19. The Computer as Prosthesis? Embodiment, Augmentation, and Disability
Chapter 20. "Have Any Remedies for Tired Eyes?": Computer Pain as Computer History
Afterword. Beyond Abstractions and Embodiments
Contributors
Index

Abstractions and Embodiments

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    A Paperback / softback by Janet Abbate, Stephanie Dick

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      Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
      Publication Date: 25/10/2022
      ISBN13: 9781421444376, 978-1421444376
      ISBN10: 1421444372

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Cutting-edge historians explore ideas, communities, and technologies around modern computing to explore how computers mediate social relations. Computers have been framed both as a mirror for the human mind and as an irreducible other that humanness is defined against, depending on different historical definitions of humanness. They can serve both liberation and control because some people's freedom has historically been predicated on controlling others. Historians of computing return again and again to these contradictions, as they often reveal deeper structures. Using twin frameworks of abstraction and embodiment, a reformulation of the old mind-body dichotomy, this anthology examines how social relations are enacted in and through computing. The authors examining Abstraction revisit central concepts in computing, including algorithm, program, clone, and risk. In doing so, they demonstrate how the meanings of these terms reflect power relations and social identities. The section

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgments
      Introduction. Thinking with Computers
      Part I. Abstractions
      Chapter 1. Waiting for Midnight: Risk Perception and the Millennium Bug
      Chapter 2. Centrists against the Center: The Jeffersonian Politics of a Decentralized Internet
      Chapter 3. Beyond the Pale: The Blackbird Web Browser's Critical Reception
      Chapter 4. Scientology Online: Copyright Infringement and the Legal Construction of the Internet
      Chapter 5. Patenting Automation of Race and Ethnicity Classifications: Protecting Neutral Technology or Disparate Treatment by Proxy?
      Chapter 6. "Difficult Things Are Difficult to Describe": The Role of Formal Semantics in European Computer Science, 1960–1980
      Chapter 7. What's in a Name? Origins, Transpositions, and Transformations of the Triptych Algorithm–Code–Program
      Chapter 8. The Lurking Problem
      Chapter 9. The Help Desk: Changing Images of Product Support in Personal Computing, 1975–1990
      Chapter 10. Power to the Clones: Hardware and Software Bricolage on the Periphery
      Part II: Embodiments
      Chapter 11. Indigenous Circuits: Navajo Women and the Racialization of Early Electronic Manufacture
      Chapter 12. Inventing the Black Computer Professional
      Chapter 13. The Baby and the Black Box: A History of Software, Sexism, and the Sound Barrier
      Chapter 14. Computing Nanyang: Information Technology in a Developing Singapore, 1965–1985
      Chapter 15. Engineering the Lay Mind: Lev Landa's Algo-Heuristic Theory and Artificial Intelligence
      Chapter 16. The Measure of Meaning: Automatic Speech Recognition and the Human-Computer Imagination
      Chapter 17. Broken Mirrors: Surveillance in Oakland as Both Reflection and Refraction of California's Carceral State
      Chapter 18. Punk Culture and the Rise of the Hacker Ethic
      Chapter 19. The Computer as Prosthesis? Embodiment, Augmentation, and Disability
      Chapter 20. "Have Any Remedies for Tired Eyes?": Computer Pain as Computer History
      Afterword. Beyond Abstractions and Embodiments
      Contributors
      Index

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