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Beginning with Ada Lovelace and her unheralded contributions to Charles Babbage and his development of the Difference Engine, Sadie Plant traces the critical contributions women have made to the progress of computing.
Shattering the myth that women are victims of technological change, Zeros + Ones shows how women and women's work in particular - weaving and typing, computing and telecommunicating - have been tending the machinery of the digital age for generations, the very technologies that are now revolutionizing the Western world.
In this manifesto on the relationship between women and machines, Sadie Plant explores the networks and connections implicit in nonlinear systems and digital machines. Steering a course beyond the old feminist dichotomies, Zeros + Ones is populated by a diverse chorus of voices - Anna Freud, Mary Shelley, Alan Turing - conceived as exploratory bundles of intelligent matter, emergent entities hacking through the constraints of their old programming and envisioning a postpatriarchal future.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Effect of technological innovations on, Social aspects, Social aspects of Technological innovations, Social aspects of Technology, Technological innovations, Technology, Women, Women in technology, Computers and civilization, Technology and civilization, Women scientists, Women's studies, Women, attitudesShowing 5 featured editions. View all 5 editions?
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Zeroes and Ones: Digital Women and the New Technoculture
September 15, 1997, Doubleday
in English
0385482604 9780385482608
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Zeroes + ones: digital women + the new technoculture
1997, Doubleday
in English
- 1st ed.
0385482604 9780385482608
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Zeros and Ones: Digital Women and the New Technoculture
1997, Fourth Estate, Doubleday
in English
- 1st ed.
1857023862 9781857023862
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. [297]-305).
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Work Description
A highly contentious, very readable and totally up-to-the-minute investigation of women’s natural relationship with modern technology, an association which, Plant argues, will trigger a new sexual revolution.
Zeros and Ones is an intelligent, provocative and accessible investigation of the intersection between women, feminism, machines and in particular, information technology. Arguing that the computer is rewriting the old conceptions of man and his world, it suggests that the telecoms revolution is also a sexual revolution which undermines the fundamental assumptions crucial to patriarchal culture. Historical, contemporary and future developments in telecommunications and in IT are interwoven with the past, present and future of feminism, women and sexual difference, and a wealth of connections, parallels and affinities between machines and women are uncovered as a result. Challenging the belief that man was ever in control of either his own agency, the planet, or his machines, this book argues it is seriously undermined by the new scientific paradigms emergent from theories of chaos, complexity and connectionism, all of which suggest that the old distinctions between man, woman, nature and technology need to be radically reassessed.
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