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Feminist in a Software Lab: Difference plus Design [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 280 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 210x140x25 mm, kaal: 499 g, 120 color illustrations, 7 halftones, 7 line illustrations
  • Sari: metaLABprojects
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Feb-2018
  • Kirjastus: Harvard University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0674728947
  • ISBN-13: 9780674728943
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 280 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 210x140x25 mm, kaal: 499 g, 120 color illustrations, 7 halftones, 7 line illustrations
  • Sari: metaLABprojects
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Feb-2018
  • Kirjastus: Harvard University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0674728947
  • ISBN-13: 9780674728943
Tara McPherson asks what might it mean to design--from conception--digital tools and applications that emerge from contextual concerns of cultural theory and from a feminist concern for difference. This question leads to the Vectors lab, which for a dozen years has experimented with digital scholarship at the intersection of theory and praxis.--

For over a dozen years, the Vectors lab has experimented with digital scholarship through its online publication, Vectors, and through Scalar, a multimedia authoring platform. The history of this software lab intersects a much longer tale about computation in the humanities, as well as tensions about the role of theory in related projects.

In the provocative essay “Where Is the Cultural Criticism in the Digital Humanities?” Alan Liu argues that “while digital humanists develop tools, data, and metadata critically . . . rarely do they extend their critique to the full register of society, economics, politics, or culture.” Many scholars have taken issues of gender or race as a central concern in digital projects, including Martha Nell Smith, Susan Brown, Melissa Terras, Laura Mandell, and Julia Flanders. Nonetheless, this critique—the difficulty of centering theory and politics in the longer arc of the computational humanities—rings true for many familiar with the field.

Tara McPherson considers debates around the role of cultural theory within the digital humanities and addresses Gary Hall’s claim that the goals of critical theory and of quantitative or computational analysis may be irreconcilable (or at the very least require “far more time and care”). She then asks what it might mean to design—from conception—digital tools and applications that emerge from contextual concerns of cultural theory and, in particular, from a feminist concern for difference. This path leads back to the Vectors lab and its ongoing efforts at the intersection of theory and praxis.



Tara McPherson asks what might it mean to design—from conception—digital tools and applications that emerge from contextual concerns of cultural theory and from a feminist concern for difference. This question leads to the Vectors lab, which for a dozen years has experimented with digital scholarship at the intersection of theory and praxis.

Arvustused

Tara McPhersons digital work is a model of intelligent design in a crazed world; her projects are bold and innovative. This is a fascinating account of the emancipatory drive she invests into those projects and an even bolder look at the genealogy of computing from the 1960s. She seeks to link the abstract universe of software design with ongoing ideologies of race and gender, and suggests even the algorithm is not immune from its cultural context. A must-read in every way. -- Daniel Herwitz, University of Michigan A beautifully nuanced and wide-ranging elaboration of the creative energy and possibilities that reverberate from the messy entanglements of the humanities, computational technologies, digital aesthetics, cultural histories, and feminist theory. McPherson does what few can: she moves into the messiness, not to settle the matter, but rather to expand our thinking about how to understand what matters. There is no one better at navigating the span between critical modes of theoretical inquiry and the creative cultural production of digital tools. -- Anne Balsamo, The New School Tara McPherson has been at the heart of the digital humanities for the last decade as a much-admired critical scholar and tool-maker. This book is a letter from the trenches of that discipline as well as an impassioned and sophisticated argument for why digital humanists must concern themselves with both praxis and theory. This book radicalizes the digital humanities, persuasively arguing for the centrality of difference in parts of the field that ignore it. Richly illustrated with digital scholarly projects on race, gender, and social justice that her lab helped to build, as well as a retelling of the history of code and computing using a feminist lens, this book is deeply generous and generative. -- Lisa Nakamura, University of Michigan

Muu info

Winner of Garfinkel Prize in Digital Humanities 2018 (United States).
Table of Contents
6(6)
A Visual Introduction 12(14)
Preface: Opening Vectors 26(2)
How to Road This Book 28(6)
1 Designing for Difference
34(78)
Into the Fray
42(11)
Modularity at Midcentury: Thinking Race + UNIX
53(9)
Situating UNIX
62(20)
Modularity in the Social Field + the Database
82(25)
Moving beyond Our Boxes + Mapping Materialisms
107(5)
Window 1 Introducing Vectors
112(1)
2 Assembling Scholarship: From Vectors to Scalar
112(142)
On Process
124(13)
Window 2 The Look + Feel of Vectors
137(9)
Window 3 Making "Stolen Time"
146(18)
Reimagining Content and Form
164(24)
Window 4 Various Vectors
188(6)
Scaling Vectors
194(40)
Window 5 The Scalar Feature Set and Showcase
234(10)
Outro: Scholarship in the Wild
244(10)
Appendix: Guidelines for Evaluating Digital Scholarship 254(7)
Endnotes 261(9)
Bibliography 270(2)
Acknowledgments 272
Credits
Tara McPherson is Professor in the School of Cinematic Arts at the University of Southern California.