User:Artemis gryllaki/Thesis Outline: Difference between revisions

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 5: Line 5:
This summer I got an email which was an open call for participation in The Eclectic Tech Carnival (/ETC), a gathering of feminists who critically explore and develop everyday skills and information technologies in the context of free speech, free software and open hardware. While reading the description, I wondered why this international group of people, identified by their gender, have the need to gather in their own spaces in order to speak about computing, technology, art and activism.
This summer I got an email which was an open call for participation in The Eclectic Tech Carnival (/ETC), a gathering of feminists who critically explore and develop everyday skills and information technologies in the context of free speech, free software and open hardware. While reading the description, I wondered why this international group of people, identified by their gender, have the need to gather in their own spaces in order to speak about computing, technology, art and activism.
#Thesis Statement:  
#Thesis Statement:  
There is a need for feminists and activists to come together in order to discuss and shed light on the problematic issues of Technology and Software development, as gender-biased fields. In order to imagine alternative inclusive technolonesses of collective knowledge production and Do It Together practices that feminist and activist groups use, are documented, archived, shared and protected in order to learn from the histories of their movements and shape their future imperatives.
There is a need for feminists and activists to come together in order to discuss and shed light on the problematic issues of Technology and Software development, as gender-biased fields. In order to imagine alternative inclusive technologies of collective knowledge production and Do It Together practices that feminist and activist groups use, are documented, archived, shared and protected in order to learn from the histories of their movements and shape their future imperatives.


==II. Body==
==II. Body==

Revision as of 22:47, 23 September 2019

Thesis Outline First Draft

I. Introduction

  1. Background:

This summer I got an email which was an open call for participation in The Eclectic Tech Carnival (/ETC), a gathering of feminists who critically explore and develop everyday skills and information technologies in the context of free speech, free software and open hardware. While reading the description, I wondered why this international group of people, identified by their gender, have the need to gather in their own spaces in order to speak about computing, technology, art and activism.

  1. Thesis Statement:

There is a need for feminists and activists to come together in order to discuss and shed light on the problematic issues of Technology and Software development, as gender-biased fields. In order to imagine alternative inclusive technologies of collective knowledge production and Do It Together practices that feminist and activist groups use, are documented, archived, shared and protected in order to learn from the histories of their movements and shape their future imperatives.

II. Body

First Topic: Hidden history or underrepresentation of female contributors in technology.
Point A: Understanding of technology is gendered and different kinds of account of history shape what our assumptions are.

  1. The women who built "ENIAC" were until recently, written out of historical accounts.
  2. Missing Women biographies on Wikipedia.

Second Topic: Technology is situated and shaped by the social relations that produce and use it.
Point A: Technologies are gendered by design and use.

  1. Technological objects that convey patriarchal ideologies and reveal gender inequality.

Third Topic: Stories of exclusion of female computer programmers.
Point A: The IT field is appropriated by men and reproduces a "male geek culture" which pushes out female and gender diverse people.

  1. Stories and anecdotes from the biography of Ellen Ullman "Life in Code: A Personal History of Technology"
  2. Stories and anecdotes from women programmers in software companies, tech forums, floss communities...

Fourth Topic: Groups of activists/feminists and their collective knowledge and memories.
Point A: There is a need for Tools, methods and infrastructures to ensure that data, projects and memory of feminist groups are properly accessible, preserved and managed.

  1. We have seen feminist and activist work being deleted from the Internet, censored, and/or prevented from being seen, heard or read.
  2. Gender-based online violence in the form of trolling and hateful machoists harassing feminists/activists online and offline.

III. Conclusion