Networks of Change
Description
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This volume will appeal to scholars and students across digital humanities, media studies, gender studies, queer theory, and internet history. It offers valuable insights for technology professionals seeking to understand the diverse foundations of digital culture, as well as activists and policymakers working toward more equitable digital spaces. By bridging historical analysis with contemporary digital issues, the book speaks to anyone concerned with how power, identity, and representation continue to shape our networked world.
The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Internet Histories.
Reviews / Votes
This volume of Internet Histories brings to light multiple fascinating and understudied facets of the history of the Internet. Through uncovering these hidden histories that center gender and sexuality, the authors have re-oriented common perceptions of the Internet, and who has historically used and built it. The communities detailed in these essays- from queer online anarchists to Mormon mommy bloggers-teach us key lessons for the present, as well as showing us that being online has always been weirder and wilder than most people know."--Mar Hicks, Author of Programmed Inequality: How Britain Discarded Women Technologists and Lost Its Edge in Computing (MIT Press, 2017)
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Persons
Autumn Edwards is Professor of Communication at Western Michigan University and Co-directs the Communication & Social Robotics Labs. Her research explores gender, human-machine communication, and human-technology relations. She is the founding Editor-in-Chief of Human-Machine Communication and a recognized leader in understanding digital interlocutors and social robots in communication.
Janet Abbate is a Professor at Virginia Tech who researches the history, culture, and politics of computing and the Internet.
Content
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