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E-grāmata: Machine in Me: An Anthropologist Sits Among Computer Engineers [Taylor & Francis e-book]

  • Formāts: 302 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 07-Jul-1998
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781315022611
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Cena: 155,64 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standarta cena: 222,34 €
  • Ietaupiet 30%
  • Formāts: 302 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 07-Jul-1998
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781315022611
Gary Lee Downey investigates the body/machine interface in his remarkable ethnography of computer engineers. Drawing on interviews, observations and personal interaction with engineers, he documents the everyday power of technology's dominant image in our society, a force widely regarded as monolithically progressive. The Machine in Me will lead the reader to understand how deeply connected we are to The Machine and how beneficial it would be for us to really understand ourselves and machines as partially configured of the other--we as part machine, machines as part human. In this way, we can begin to see both the power and limitations of technology.
Preface and Acknowledgments ix
1. Images Count
1(31)
The Doctrine of Competitiveness
6(4)
The Cultural Boundary Between Humans and Machines
10(3)
CAD/CAM and Competitiveness
13(5)
Intervening through Technology Studies
18(8)
Another Try
26(6)
2. We Put You in Control: The Trade Show
32(26)
Congruence
33(4)
It's All in the Machine
37(12)
Where Control Doesn't Fit
49(9)
3. Does Productivity Fit?
58(24)
Tar Baby
60(3)
Productivity as Burden and Strategy
63(2)
Living with the Machine
65(6)
Boxed in by Productivity
71(3)
Return of the Dominant Image
74(8)
4. Seducing Money
82(25)
Quick Bucks
83(3)
1983: A Glorious Future
86(8)
1987: From System to Commodities
94(6)
1990: Living for the Quarterly Report
100(7)
5. Adapting a Nation around Automation
107(27)
Hybrid Humans
109(8)
Tweaking Boundries
117(4)
Negotiating Inside the Code
121(7)
Resistance from Industry
128(6)
6. Beyond Control and Submission
134(25)
Who Is the Slave?
135(4)
Was This Iteration?
139(2)
Authorized Personnel
141(4)
Passions Inside
145(5)
Configurations of Agency
150(3)
Mapping Positions
153(6)
7. Locating Me Inside It: Coding
159(27)
First Transcriptions
161(11)
Putting Objects into the Machine
172(6)
Engines of Analysis
178(8)
8. Locating It Inside Me: Confusion
186(24)
"I Want Control"
187(5)
"I Just Want a Tool"
192(7)
Systematic Confusion
199(11)
9. The Making of Experts
210(27)
Birth History
212(2)
Becoming Hardware and Software
214(8)
Ownership
222(4)
Experts in Science?
226(6)
More Than One Dimension
232(5)
10. On the Replacement of Humans with Machines: A Different Humanism
237(15)
What Might Have Emerged in Industry?
240(5)
What Might Have Emerged in Education?
245(3)
What Might Have Emerged in Research?
248(4)
Notes 252(10)
References 262(13)
Index 275
Gary Lee Downey is Director of the Center for Science and Technology Studies at Virginia Tech.