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ANNOUNCING:
History
| Gender | Computing
Public
Conference
30
May 2008
Charles
Babbage Institute
Andersen
Library
University
of Minnesota
Minneapolis MN 55455
Registration now open
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Images from
"Internet Quilt" courtesy of Diane Close
Women were active
participants in building and programming the first electronic digital
computers, and notably prominent in
the first generation of computer programmers in the 1950s, but they
have faced
serious barriers to full participation in the computing
professions. Today, computing
persists as
one of the most gender-segregated domains of modern life. How and when did
a
male-coded world of
computing emerge? How and why has it has continued? What
are the
exceptions
-- and promising strategies for change?
The Charles
Babbage Institute at the University of Minnesota presents a day-long
public conference devoted to a much-needed examination of these
questions. While the National Science Foundation and other policy
actors have devoted immense resources to increasing women's
participation in computing, over the past two decades there has been a
striking drop in women's
participation in computing education and a corresponding tail-off in
the
U.S. workforce. Clearly, an important "missing piece" is yet to
be
discovered. This international conference, with participants from six
countries, examines gender and the diverse uses of
computing in offices, libraries, schools, mass media, and the computing
profession. The
eight papers will spark lively audience discussion on these themes:
- Automation,
skill, and power;
- Gender
discourse and imagery;
- Boundaries
and identity;
- Gendered
cultures of work and play.
Complementing
these presentations is a scheduled poster session, showcasing
additional views and innovative projects, as well as a viewing of
"Gendered Bits: Identities, Practices, and Artifacts in
Computing." This new exhibit, curated by CBI archivist Arvid
Nelsen,
explores how gender has shaped the professional identities and material
culture of computing. Using materials from CBI's extensive
archival
holdings in the history of computing, as well as the Children's
Literature Research Collections,
it presents the contributions, struggles, and shifting roles
of women
as well as raises questions about gender broadly and the specific
issues of
masculinity. The exhibit in Andersen Library will be open 28 May
through 23 July 2008.
Register now
for the conference and get a free lunch! For registration,
the conference program, travel and lodging details, a bibliography
with key literature, and useful links see <www.umn.edu/~tmisa/gender/>.
Please
direct
questions to <cbi@umn.edu>.
Many
thanks to our generous sponsors
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The
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft is the central agency promoting
research at universities
and other publicly financed research institutions in Germany. |

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The
U of M's Institute of Technology (IT)—created in 1935 and today one of
the premier colleges of its kind in the nation—comprises 12 departments
and 24 research centers that encompass engineering, the physical
sciences, and mathematics. |

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The
U of M's Graduate Program in the History of Science, Technology, and
Medicine studies these areas in their broad cultural context, drawing
on an interdisciplinary faculty embedded in four colleges.
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The
U of M’s Department of Computer Science and Engineering is one of the
nation’s top research departments, with award winning faculty members,
and successful, accomplished alumni.
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The
U of M’s Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering is
consistently ranked among the top 20 of all EE programs in the United
States.
|
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The
U of M's Office of International Programs promotes the
internationalization of the teaching, research, and outreach missions
of the University.
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Program Committee: Janet Abbate
(VT);
Tom Misa (Minnesota);
Veronika Oechtering (Bremen); Jeff Yost (CBI)
Charles Babbage
Institute
211 Andersen Library
University of
Minnesota
Minneapolis MN 55455 USA www.cbi.umn.edu