Hybrid event @Siegen July 4+5: Rethinking and Rebuilding: Grand Narratives in the History of Computing
Hello SIGCIS, Anyone not already committed to spending July 4 & 5 in a patriotic fervor to celebrate the revolt of the colonies might instead be interested in a little event we have planned in Siegen. Its inspired by the publication last year of A New History of Modern Computing but the format is primarily roundtable discussions exploring other possible ways of structuring and framing big picture narratives around the history of computing. Honestly, nothing makes you more aware of the arbitrariness of such a book than writing one. Weve got a very interesting and interdisciplinary lineup assembled for your pleasure. Everything is in the afternoon German time, giving North Americans a shot at attending at least some of the panels (depending on time zone and waking habits). Free registration for both online and in person. A little more than half of the panelists are expected to be in person, but realistically most of the other attendees will be online. But if any of you are nearby and want to call into Siegen I would be happy to see you! We always offer lots of food and drink, and given the late running time I will be mixing up some cocktails prior to the final sessions on both days. The program is at https://www.socialstudiesof.info/grandnarratives/ While I am pasting the current text below, this will continue to change (dinners added, possible tweaks to timing and panel titles, couple people we invited who havent confirmed yet). So do not trust the version pasted below for anything other than a general sense of whether you are going to bother to register and mark your calendar. Best wishes, Tom NB: All times below are European. Subtract 1 hour for UK, 6 for E. Coast, 9 for W. Coast and so on. Rethinking and Rebuilding: Grand Narratives in the History of Computing July 4 & 5, 2022 at Siegen University and online Most current program: <https://www.socialstudiesof.info/grandnarratives/> https://www.socialstudiesof.info/grandnarratives Organizer: Thomas Haigh (University of Wisconsin--Milwaukee & Siegen University). This event is part of project A01 of the <https://www.mediacoop.uni-siegen.de/en/> SFB 1187: Media of Cooperation. Theme: This event is prompted by the publication of A New History of Modern Computing by Thomas Haigh and Paul Ceruzzi (MIT Press, 2021), a book that was planned and largely written under the auspices of Siegen University. As the most ambitious scholarly overview history of computing published this century, this book updates the grand narrative of computing history by drawing on new generations of scholarship. Topics such as digital media devices, videogames, home computing, computer networking, smartphones, cloud computing, and the evolution of the IBM PC standard are integrated into the overall story for the first time. Yet our purpose here is less to celebrate the new book as to ask what it, and its silences, tell us about the potential to tell other stories on a similar scale about computers and their history. The workshop gathers scholars from fields such as media studies, the history of science and mathematics, and science and technology studies to ask what a grand narrative of the history of computing might look like if told from other perspectives. What do Haigh and Ceruzzi get right, and what opportunities did they neglect? What topics and chapters would appear if the story was told in a different way? What would be the protagonists and the plots? Venue: Room 217/18 of Herrengarten 3, 57072 Siegen and online. This is a hybrid event. Speakers are roughly evenly divided between those in Siegen and those participating by Zoom. To allow for participation from North America each day's sessions start in the afternoon. Registration: There is no charge for registration. To register, for in-person or online participation, please email Anna Büdenbender at <mailto:anna.buedenbender@student.uni-siegen.de> anna.buedenbender@student.uni-siegen.de. July 4 (13:00 Coffee & snacks) 13:30-13:45 Introduction by Erhard Schüttpelz (Siegen University) 13:45-14:00 Remarks by Paul Ceruzzi 14:00-15:30 Could we structure a big story around the materialities of data, computation and networks? Roundtable discussion featuring Cyrus Mody (Maastricht University), Moritz Feichtinger (Universität Bern), Axel Volmar (Siegen University) & Valérie Schafer (C2DH, University of Luxembourg). (15:30-16:00) Coffee & snack break. 16:00-17:30 What if we dont center the United States? Roundtable discussion featuring Ksenia Tatarchenko (Singapore Management University). Pierre Mounier -Kuhn (CNRS & Université Paris-Sorbonne), Petri Paju (University of Turku), Elisabetta Mori (Middlesex University) & Gerard Alberts (University of Amsterdam). (17:30-18:00 Cocktail break, featuring cassis gin & tonic and Pimms & ginger ale) 18:00-19:30 Chances Seized and Opportunities Squandered: Writing A New History of Modern Computing, Thomas Haigh (University of WisconsinMilwaukee & Siegen University). 20:00 Dinner. Details TBA July 5 12:00-13:30 What can we gain by reconnecting the history of computing with the histories of computer science and mathematics? Roundtable discussion featuring Ulf Hashagen (Deutsches Museum), Helena Durnova (Masaryk University, Brno), Mark Priestley (National Museum of Computing, UK) & Liesbeth de Mol (Université de Lille). (13:30-14:00 Coffee & snack break) 14:00-15:30 How could media theory and STS underpin new historical ways of understanding the story of the computer? Roundtable discussion, convened by Sebastian Giessmann and Tatjana Seitz . Featuring Ben Peters (Tulsa University), Till Heilmann (Bochum), Elisa Linseisen (Vienna/Paderborn), Sebastian Giessmann (University of Siegen) & Tatjana Seitz (University of Siegen, moderator) (15:30-16:00 Coffee & snack break) 16:00 -17:30 Can we integrate issues of gender, justice and embodiment into the story of the computer itself or must these narratives remain separate and particular? Roundtable discussion featuring Elizabeth Petrick (Rice University), Valérie Schafer (C2DH, University of Luxembourg), Jeffrey Yost (Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota). (17:30-18:00 Cocktail break featuring Toms famous negroni) 18:00-19:30 Where did the dominant scholarly narratives in the history of computing come from, and how well have they held up? Roundtable discussion with William Aspray & Martin Campbell-Kelly (authors of Computer: A History of the Information Machine) and Paul Ceruzzi (author of A History of Modern Computing) moderated by JoAnne Yates (author of Structuring the Information Age). 20:00 Dinner. Details TBA
participants (1)
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thomas.haigh@gmail.com