So.hist.Info Seminar : Anna Katharina Osterlow (CERI, Paris) - Training “The African vanguard of the computer age”
Dear colleagues, We are pleased to invite you to the next session of the Socio-History of Informatics Seminar 2025-2026. This sixth and penultimate session of the 2025–2026 season will host: *April 13, 3:00–5:00 pm* *Anna Katharina Osterlow (Centre for History at Sciences Po / CERI, Paris)* for a presentation entitled: *Training “The African vanguard of the computer age”: early computing and visions of modernity and independence in Senegal and Nigeria, 1963-1984* The seminar will be held in *hybrid format* at *UTC-Paris, 62 boulevard Sébastopol – 75003 Paris* (Salle Danielle Quarante [IMI/IMI-QUARAN]). A connection link and the room number will be posted on this page before the event. To attend the seminar, please *register here <https://framaforms.org/inscription-seminaire-de-socio-histoire-de-linformatique-1757664332>* *.* *Training “The African vanguard of the computer age”: early computing and visions of modernity and independence in Senegal and Nigeria, 1963-1984* In March 1982, an ambitious, transnational group of teachers, scientists, and computer experts from Senegal, France, and the United States launched the project “Computers in education” at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Dakar, Senegal, to explore the usage of micro-computers in teaching and learning. The exchanges within the transnational network of experts around this project raised questions about the “Westernness” of technology, the appropriate ways to spread computing knowledge adapted to Senegalese culture, and the conditions of exporting computer hardware from the Global North to the Global South. Similar questions were raised in a much earlier computer project in 1964 in Nigeria, where International Business Machines (IBM) established the “African Education Centre”, in cooperation with the University of Ibadan, to train students from different African countries on an IBM punch card computer. While evoking similar questions on modernity and computing, this project brought forward Nigerian aspirations of linking computing with the efforts of nation-building and decolonisation, and it was announced as a symbol for the path that the African continent would take. Considering the changing practices of computing over the years, my research investigates the entanglements between French and US American state and private actors with African academics, functionaries, teachers, and computer scientists, from the 1960s to the late 1980s, in their ambitions to spread computing. Thereby, my research intends to shed light on the “silence” surrounding African computing history and its embeddedness in the global dynamics of decolonisation and the Cold War. My research is based on archival materials from archives in France, Senegal, Nigeria, and the US The *So.Hist-Info seminar* is coordinated by* Mathilde Fichen, Camille Paloque-Bergès & Adrien Tournier (HT2S lab Cnam, Paris) and Léandre Bécard (COSTECH, UTC, Compiègne). *Please note that this will be the first session organized with our new co-coordinator, L. Bécard. More info on the seminar : https://sohistinfo.github.io/ https://technique-societe.cnam.fr/seminaire-socio-histoire-de-l-informatique... Link to the online announcement : https://technique-societe.cnam.fr/anna-katharina-osterlow-training-the-afric...
participants (1)
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Camille Paloque-Bergès