Gender, Technology, and Computer Culture
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Spring Semester 1998
Professor Sherry Turkle
Program in Science, Technology and Society
MIT Room
E51-296C / tel: 253-4068 / email: sturkle@media.mit.edu
Office hours: by appointment; send
email to set up appointment
All selections included in reader or in class handouts, except where
noted
by * which indicates a book to buy.
February 3. Introduction
February 10. Feminist Epistemology
- Carol Gilligan, In a Different Voice (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University
Press, 1982), pp. 1-63.*
- Evelyn Fox Keller, "Women, Science, and Popular Mythology" in
Joan Rothschild (ed.), Machina Ex Dea: Feminist Perspectives on
Technology (New York: Pergamon Press, 1983).
- Judy Wajcman, "Feminist Critiques of Science and Technology"
and "Conclusion" from Feminism Confronts Technology
(Pennsylvania: Penn
State University Press, 1991).
February 17. (no class)
- Sherry Turkle, "Introduction" and "The Quality of Emergence"
in Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the
Internet (New York: Simon
and Schuster, 1995).*
February 24. Feminist Epistemology II
March 3. Historical Case Studies on Gender and
Technology
- Judith A. McGaw, "Women and the History of American
Technology" in Sandra Harding and Jean F. O'Barr (Eds.) Sex and
Scientific Inquiry (Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 1987).
- Margery W. Davies, "Women Clerical Workers and the Typewriter:
The Writing Machine" in Cheris Kramarae (Ed.) Technology and
Women's Voices: Keeping in Touch (New York: Routledge,
1988).
- Lana F. Rakow, "Women and the Telephone: The Gendering of a
Communications Technology" in Cheris Kramarae (Ed.) Technology
and Women's Voices: Keeping in Touch (New York: Routledge,
1988).
- Sally Otos and Ellen Levy, "Word Processing: This is Not a
Final Draft" in Jan Zimmerman (Ed.) The Technological Woman
(New York: Praeger Publishing, 1983).
March 10. Reticence and Pluralism: Stages vs.
Styles
- Sherry Turkle, "Computational Reticence" in Cheris Kramarae
(Ed.) Technology and Women's Voices: Keeping in Touch (New
York: Routledge,
1986).
- Sherry Turkle and Seymour
Papert, "Epistemological Pluralism and the Revaluation of the
Concrete" Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 11:1992,
3-33.
- Ellen Ullman, "Out of Time: Reflections on the Programming
Life" in James Brooks and Iain Boal (Eds.) Resisting the
Virtual Life (San Francisco: City
Lights, 1995).
- Margaret Lowe Benston, "Women's Voices/Men's Voices:
Technology as Language" in Cheris Kramarae (Ed.) Technology and
Women's Voices: Keeping in Touch (New York: Routledge,
1986).
March 17. Women, Computing and TechnoScientific
Cultures: Continuing the Debate on Reticence
- Karen Coyle, "How Hard Can It Be" in Lynn Cherny and Elizabeth
Weise (Eds.) wired_women (Washington: Seal
Press, 1996).
- Newsweek, "Men, Women and Computers" May 16, 1994.
- Laura Miller, "Women and Children First: Gender and the
Settling of the Electronic Frontier" in James Brooks and Iain Boal
(Eds.) Resisting the Virtual Life (San Francisco: City
Lights, 1995).
- Judy Wajcman, "Technology as Masculine Culture" from
Feminism Confronts Technology (Pennsylvania:
Penn State University
Press, 1991).
- Sharon
Traweek, "Pilgrim's Progress: Male Tales Told During a
Life in Physics," from Beamtimes and Lifetimes: The World
of High Energy Physics (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 1988).
March 24. (no class)
- Sherry Turkle, "Taking Things at Interface Value" from Life
on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet (New York:
Simon and Schuster,
1995).*
March 31. The Changing Computer Culture:
Revisiting the Question of Style
- Sherry Turkle, "Hackers; Loving the Machine for
Itself" from The Second Self (New York: Simon
and Schuster, 1984).
- Sara
Kiesler, Lee
Sproull, and Jaclyn Eccles, "Pool Halls, Chips and War Games"
Psychology
of Women Quarterly, 9: 1985, pp. 451-462.
- Sherry Turkle, "A Tale of Two Aesthetics" from Life on the
Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet (New York:
Simon and Schuster,
1995).*
- Sherry Turkle, "The Triumph of Tinkering" from Life on the
Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet. *
April 7. From Artificial Life to Virtual Pets:
Shifts in Gaming
- Sherry Turkle, "Making a Pass at a Robot" from Life on the
Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet (New York:
Simon and Schuster,
1995).*
- Sherry Turkle, "Artificial Life as the New Frontier" from
Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the
Internet. *
- Sherry Turkle, "Child Philosophers: Are Smart Machines
Alive?" from The Second Self: Computers and the Human
Spirit (New York: Simon
and Schuster, 1984).
- Ted Friedman, "Making Sense of Software: Computer Games and
Interactive Textuality" in Steven Jones (Ed.) Cybersociety
(Thousand Oaks: Sage,
1995).
- Collection of Web pages on Girls, Gaming, and Virtual
Pets
April 14. Gender and the Internet
- Sherry Turkle, "Virtuality and Its Discontents,"
"Aspects of the Self" and "TinySex and Gender Trouble" from
Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the
Internet. *
- Julian
Dibbell, "A
Rape in Cyberspace" Village
Voice (Dec. 21, 1993).
- Lori Kendall, "MUDder? I Hardly Know 'Er! Adventures of a
Feminist MUDder" in Lynn Cherny and Elizabeth Weise (Eds.)
wired_women (Washington: Seal Press, 1996).
April 21 (no class)
April 28. Gender and the Internet II
- Dawn Dietrich, "(Re)-Fashioning the Techno-Erotic Woman:
Gender and Textuality in the Cybercultural Matrix" in Steven Jones
(Ed.) Virtual Culture (London: Sage,
1997).
- Jennifer Light, "The Digital Landscape: A New Place for
Women" Gender,
Place, and Culture, 2(2) September 1995.
- Susan Leigh Star, "From Hestia to Home Page: Feminism and the
Concept of Home in Cyberspace" in Nina Lykke & Rosi Braidotti
(Eds.) Between Monsters, Goddesses and Cyborgs (London: ZED
Books, 1996).
- Susan Clerc, "Estrogen Brigades and 'Big Tits' Threads: Media
Fandom Online and Off" in Lynn Cherny and Elizabeth Weise (Eds.)
wired_women (Washington: Seal Press, 1996).
May 5. Gender and Technoscientific Imaginaries:
Cyberpunk as a Case Study
- William Gibson,
Neuromancer (New York: Ace, 1984).*
- Andrew Ross, "Cyberpunk in Boystown" from Strange
Weather (London: Verson, 1991).
- Jenny Wolmark, "Cyberpunk, Cyborgs, and Feminist Science
Fiction" from Aliens and Others (Iowa City: University
of Iowa Press, 1994).
May 12. Conclusion and Class Presentations
- Dale Spender,
"Women, Power and Cyberspace" from Nattering on the Net
(North Melbourne: Spinifex,
1995).
======================================================
Hands-on/Experimentation:
As the class proceeds, students will choose to engage in hands-on
exploration of the following materials. They will be discussed
in conjunction with the readings.
- Chat rooms -- AOL, IRC,
Compuserve,
Web-based
- Computer games -- different kinds/genres ("slash & burn"
vs. "girls games")
- Virtual worlds -- MUDs,
graphical worlds, Palace,
etc.
- Tamagotchi -- using
one, exploring web sites
- Artificial Life -- computer programs (Dolphin, Fish, etc.
also, Sim series)
======================================================
Class format: During the first class meeting, the class will
divide itself into groups. Each week, members of one group will get
together before the class period, discuss the assignment (Where could
the readings have gone further? What questions did they
raise? What are their greatest strengths? Their greatest
vulnerabilities?), and produce 3 questions for each of the
readings.
The class period will be divided in half; a discussion of
the readings led by the group that has prepared questions for the
class and a lecture/discussion by the instructor. At the
conclusion of each class, the instructor will bring the class to a
close and foreshadow important themes in the following week's
assignment. Additionally, there will be a 15 minute break.
Final paper: A final paper is due in class on May 5th of
approximately 20-25 pages. It should examine some aspect of the
course is greater detail. For example, the paper could examine some
aspect of gender on the Internet (in MUDs, on IRC, on
newsgroups); experiences of women in the world of computing;
the rhetoric of computer science (including artificial intelligence
and artificial life) seen from a gender-sensitive perspective; gender
and science fiction; women's political action on the Internet
and Web.
Graduate Student Requirements: The final paper
for graduate students should be a seminar-style paper of
approximately 30 pages in length.
Grades: The grade will be based on class
participation and the quality of the final paper.
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