Citation link:
http://dx.doi.org/10.25819/ubsi/7894
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Haigh_Finding_a_story.pdf | 2.09 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
Dokument Type: | Book | metadata.dc.title: | Finding a story for the history of computing | Authors: | Haigh, Thomas | Institute: | DFG-Sonderforschungsbereich 1187 "Medien der Kooperation" | Free keywords: | History of Computing, Media History, Internet History | Dewey Decimal Classification: | 302.23 Medien (Kommunikationsmittel) | GHBS-Clases: | KLE KNZ TTL |
Issue Date: | 2018 | Publish Date: | 2018 | Series/Report no.: | Working paper series / SFB 1187 Medien der Kooperation | Source: | SFB 1187 Medien der Kooperation: Working Paper Series, No 3, 2018. - URL https://www001.zimt.uni-siegen.de/ojs/index.php/wps1187/article/view/20 | Abstract: | Thomas Haigh is working with Paul Ceruzzi of the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC on an expanded and completely reorganized version of Ceruzzi’s classic monograph A History of Modern Computing. Haigh discusses the challenges involved in producing a one volume history of a uniquely flexible technology. Since the first edition of the book was published twenty years ago our sense of what the computer is for has shifted utterly, to encompass media consumption, personal communication, and shopping as well as the traditional activities of business administration and scientific number crunching. To reflect this, Ceruzzi and Haigh are adopting a new structure, in which each chapter of the book tells the story of how “the computer” becomes something different through its interaction with a particular set of users and applications. Haigh connects this structure to the work of historian Michael S. Mahoney, and his discussion of the “Histories of Computing(s).” He ponders the particular difficulty of avoiding a simplistic narrative of historical progress, often called a “whig history,” in summarizing the evolution of a technology whose spectacular technical improvement has come to define our idea of modernity. Haigh also discusses Ceruzzi’s text in relation to other comprehensive histories of computing, the production process of the new edition, and some of the editorial choices involved in a project of this kind. |
DOI: | http://dx.doi.org/10.25819/ubsi/7894 | URN: | urn:nbn:de:hbz:467-13377 | URI: | https://dspace.ub.uni-siegen.de/handle/ubsi/1337 | License: | https://dspace.ub.uni-siegen.de/static/license.txt |
Appears in Collections: | Publikationen aus der Universität Siegen |
This item is protected by original copyright |
Page view(s)
791
checked on Dec 1, 2024
Download(s)
354
checked on Dec 1, 2024
Google ScholarTM
Check
Altmetric
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.