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E-raamat: Humans at Work in the Digital Age: Forms of Digital Textual Labor [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

Edited by (Texas A&M University, USA), Edited by (Texas A&M University, USA)
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Humans at Work in the Digital Age explores the roots of twenty-first century cultures of digital textual labor, mapping the diverse physical and cognitive acts involved, and recovering the invisible workers and work that support digital technologies.Drawing on fourteen case studies organized around four sites of work, the book shows how definitions of labor have been influenced by the digital technologies that employees use to produce, interpret, or process text. Incorporating methodology and theory from a range of disciplines and highlighting labor issues related to topics as diverse as census tabulation, market research, electronic games, digital archives and 3D modeling, contributors uncover the roles played by race, class, gender, sexuality, and national politics in determining how narratives of digital labor are constructed and erased. Because each chapter is centered on the human cost of digital technologies, however, it is individual people immersed in cultures of technology who are the focus of the volume, rather than the technologies themselves.Humans at Work in the Digital Age shows how humanistic inquiry can be a valuable tool in the emerging conversation surrounding digital textual labor. As such, the book will be essential reading for academics and postgraduate students engaged in the study of digital humanities; human-computer interaction; digital culture and social justice; race, class, gender, and sexuality in digital realms; the economics of the Internet; and technology in higher education.
List of figures
vii
Acknowledgments viii
List of contributors
ix
Introduction: toward a humanist account of digital labor 1(14)
Andrew Pilsch
Shawna Ross
PART I Government
15(60)
1 Racialized surveillance and the US census: tabulating labor
17(15)
J. D. Schnepf
2 Digital labor and trans histories: resisting assigned gender in the early mainframe era
32(23)
Mar Hicks
3 Big data and universal design in The Home Market: are there market researchers in Utopia?
55(20)
Megan Faragher
PART II Industry
75(80)
4 Working in the shadow of the object
77(20)
Rebecca Perry
5 Work, play, and the banality of the digital: boredom as form
97(20)
Paul Benzon
6 Labor, data, and amateur inventor in the age of the Silicon Valley boy billionaire: Edisonade, Zuckerbergade
117(16)
Nicholas M. Kelly
7 Digitizing labor in the Google Books Project: gloved fingertips and severed hands
133(22)
Andrea Zeffiro
PART III Out of the office
155(30)
8 Reading women's labor in the cybernetic seventies: vital work
157(15)
Madeleine Monson-Rosen
9 The economy of online comments
172(13)
John R. Gallagher
PART IV University
185(82)
10 The digital labor of blended learning: the Reading Cities project
187(18)
Melissa Dinsman
Carrie Johnston
Elizabeth Rodrigues
11 Using video games to test the boundaries between work, play, and cultural criticism: the labor of critique
205(18)
Matthew Kelly
12 (Re)canonizing world literature with digital archives and online magazines from Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Mainland China
223(16)
Jessica Siu-Yin Yeung
13 The stakes of digital labor in the twenty-first-century academy: the revolution will not be Turkified
239(11)
Roopika Risam
14 Scaling black feminisms: a critical discussion about the digital labor of representation
250(17)
Alexandria Lockett
Index 267
Shawna Ross is an Assistant Professor at Texas A&M University, where she researches and teaches on British modernism, Victorian literature, and the digital humanities. Her monograph Charlotte Brontë at the Anthropocene is under contract at SUNY Press, while her co-written collection Reading Modernism with Machines was released in 2016 and her co-written book Using Digital Humanities in the Classroom was released in 2017. Her other works may be found in Digital Humanities Quarterly, Victorians, the Journal of Interactive Pedagogy, the Journal of Modern Literature, the Henry James Review, and Modernism/modernity PrintPlus, among other venues.

Andrew Pilsch is an Associate Professor of English at Texas A&M University, where he teaches and researches rhetoric and the digital humanities. His first book, Transhumanism: Evolutionary Futurism and the Human Technologies of Utopia, was released by University of Minnesota Press in 2017, when it was awarded the Science Fiction and Technoculture Studies Book Prize. His research has been published in Amodern, Philosophy & Rhetoric, and Science Fiction Studies.