CFP: Annals special issue on computer games
Dear SIGCIS members, FYI--Please see the attached Call For Papers for a special issue of /IEEE Annals of the History of Computing/ on "Perspectives on the History of Computer Games". Dr. Henry Lowood (Stanford University) will be the guest editor of the issue. Best, Jeff Jeffrey R. Yost Associate Director, Charles Babbage Institute Editor in Chief, IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 222 21^st Avenue South University of Minnesota Minneapolis, MN 55455 612 624 5050 612 625 8054 (FAX) yostx003@umn.edu
ANNOUNCING: History | Gender | Computing Public Conference 30 May 2008 Charles Babbage Institute Andersen Library University of Minnesota Minneapolis MN 55455 **** Registration now open **** Women were active participants in building and programming the first electronic digital computers, and notably prominent in the first generation of computer programmers in the 1950s, but they have faced serious barriers to full participation in the computing professions. Today, computing persists as one of the most gender-segregated domains of modern life. How and when did a male-coded world of computing emerge? How and why has it has continued? What are the exceptions -- and promising strategies for change? The Charles Babbage Institute at the University of Minnesota presents a day-long public conference devoted to a much-needed examination of these questions. While the National Science Foundation and other policy actors have devoted immense resources to increasing women's participation in computing, over the past two decades there has been a striking **drop** in women's participation in computing education and a corresponding tail-off in the U.S. workforce. Clearly, an important "missing piece" is yet to be discovered. This international conference, with participants from six countries, examines gender and the diverse uses of computing in offices, libraries, schools, mass media, and the computing profession. The eight papers will spark lively audience discussion on these themes: * Automation, skill, and power; * Gender discourse and imagery; * Boundaries and identity; * Gendered cultures of work and play. Complementing these presentations is a scheduled poster session, showcasing additional views and innovative projects, as well as a viewing of "Gendered Bits: Identities, Practices, and Artifacts in Computing." This new exhibit, curated by CBI archivist Arvid Nelsen, explores how gender has shaped the professional identities and material culture of computing. Using materials from CBI's extensive archival holdings in the history of computing, as well as the Children's Literature Research Collections, it presents the contributions, struggles, and shifting roles of women as well as raises questions about gender broadly and the specific issues of masculinity. The exhibit in Andersen Library will be open 28 May through 23 July 2008. Register _now_ for the conference and get a free lunch! For registration, the conference program, travel and lodging details, a bibliography with key literature, and useful links see <www.umn.edu/~tmisa/gender/>. Please direct questions to <cbi@umn.edu>. ================================================================
"May 30 U of M conference explores gender gap in computing professions" The University of Minnesota's Charles Babbage Institute presents an international conference exploring the gender gap in computing on Friday, May 30, at the Charles Babbage Institute, Anderson Library, 222 21st Ave. S., Minneapolis. The conference is free and open to the public, but registration is required for lunch and/or dinner. The conference, entitled History | Gender | Computing, features presenters from six countries who will observe that women were active participants in the early days of computer programming, but examine why computing today is one of the most gender-segregated domains of modern life. Complementing the presentations is a scheduled poster session, showcasing additional views and innovative projects, as well as a new exhibit, "Gendered Bits," exploring how gender has shaped the professional identities and material culture of computing. |===================================================| | http://www.umn.edu/~tmisa/gender/ | |===================================================| -- Thomas J. Misa Director, Charles Babbage Institute 211 Andersen Library 222 - 21st Avenue South University of Minnesota Minneapolis, MN 55455 612 624.5050 tel 612 625.8054 fax http://www.cbi.umn.edu Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Program for History of Science, Technology & Medicine ===========================================================
participants (2)
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Jeff Yost -
tmisa@umn.edu