Exploring the Early Digital -- book and SHOT panel
Hello SIGCIS, I wanted to let you know about a book I edited which appeared earlier this year with Springer, and encourage those of you currently in Milan for SHOT to consider coming to our panel this afternoon. The book is called Exploring the Early Digital and features a lineup of some very well-known figures in the history of computing (TOC at the bottom of this message). It is based on a workshop held at Siegen University back in 2017. But we are mostly not talking about traditional computing topics instead the focus is on other kinds of digital technology, and on approaches engaged with the materiality and affordances of technology. My introduction and the series forewords by Gerard Alberts and Erhard Schüttpelz are online at http://early.digital so I wont write the full manifesto here. The SHOT panel features me as editor, Ron Kline and Ksenia Tatarchenko as contributors, Gerard Alberts as series editor, and Pierre Mounier-Kuhn as chair. Rather than the usual presentations, we aim to get through some short introductory remarks in 20-25 minutes and leave the rest of the time for discussion among everyone who attends. It is in the final conference slot, so if you fancy something a little different after two days of talks please come along. Our proposal to SHOT promised that the discussion would focus on: Benefits, and risks, of taking digitality seriously as an analytical category to frame a field of historical study (rather than purely as an actors category to tell the history of). Prospects for a historiographical convergence between the histories of computing, media, and communication to parallel the historical convergence of these areas. Unique contributions that members of the SHOT community can make to broader discussions of digitality, in areas such as digital humanities, algorithm studies, and digital media studies. Currently I am working with Sebastian Giessmann and the Media of Cooperation project at Siegen to develop some of these ideas further, to make digitality into a useful and coherent analytical category based on a bottom-up, historically responsible analysis of affordances that explain the remarkable power of modern hardware and software systems as something made possible by digital practices. We held some more workshops on that theme which should result in a second book called Becoming Digital. Ive been inexcusably lax in following up on those events, but the book project is now being rebooted so if you took part in one you have either heard recently from me with apologies or will do in the near future. The current, Exploring the Early Digital book is in the Springer series History of Computing which, as you know from some recent messages, now has a reasonable list price of $40 or so for nicely produced hardback books. In addition, if your university has a subscription you can download the entire book free of charge from the Springer digital library. https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783030021511 1. Introducing the Early Digital by Thomas Haigh <http://www.tomandmaria.com/tom> (University of WisconsinMilwaukee & Siegen University). 2. Inventing an Analog Past and a Digital Future in Computing by Ronald Kline <http://sts.cornell.edu/ronald-r-kline> (Cornell University). 3. Forgotten Machines: The Need For a New Master Narrative by Doron Swade <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doron_Swade> (Royal Holloway, University of London). 4. Calvin Mooers, Zatocoding, and Early Research on Information Retrieval by Paul E. Ceruzzi <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_E._Ceruzzi> (Smithsonian Institution). 5. Switching the engineers mind set to Boolean. Applying Shannons algebra to control circuits and digital computing (1938-1958) by Maarten Bullynck <http://www2.univ-paris8.fr/histoire/?page_id=2186> (Paris 8). 6. The ENIAC Display: Insignia of a Digital Praxeology by Tristan Thielmann <https://ischool.uni-siegen.de/en/issi/employees-and-members/thielmann/> (Siegen University). 7. The Evolution of Digital Computing Practice on the Cambridge University EDSAC, 1949-1951 by Martin Campbell-Kelly <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Campbell-Kelly> (Warwick University). 8. The Media of Programming by Mark Priestley <http://markpriestley.net/> (Independent scholar) & Thomas Haigh <http://tomandmaria.com/tom> (University of WisconsinMilwaukee & Siegen University). 9. Foregrounding the Background: Business, Economics, Labor, and Government Policy as Shaping Forces in Early Digital Computing History by William Aspray <https://www.colorado.edu/cmci/people/information-science/william-aspray> (University of Colorado Boulder) & Christopher Loughnane (University of Glasgow). 10. The Man with a Micro-calculator: Digital Modernity and Late Soviet Computing Practices by Ksenia Tatarchenko (Geneva University). Best wishes, Tom
participants (1)
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Thomas Haigh