STS Circle at Harvard
[cid:[email protected]]
Margo Boenig-Liptsin
Harvard, STS/History of Science

on

A New Literacy for the Information Age: Children, Computers, and Citizenship

Monday, March 30
12:15-2:00 pm
K262, the Bowie-Vernon Room, Knafel Building, CGIS, 1737 Cambridge Street

[cid:[email protected]]

Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
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 before Thursday morning, April 2.

Abstract:   In the 1970s and 1980s computers were actively introduced to 
children in the US, France, and the Soviet Union through “computer literacy” 
programs. Pioneers of computer literacy believed that the lay public, and 
particularly children, needed to "know" computers and they were preoccupied 
with forming the citizens of the information age. Their programs aimed not just 
to teach instrumental skills for operating the machines but to develop new ways 
of thinking and being. According to one French television program, computers 
were tools for people “to dream and build lives with.” Here was an artifact 
imagined to be integral to individual lives and identities, as integral as the 
traditional instruments of reading and writing. In this talk I compare the 
sociotechnical imaginaries of the computer literate citizen in the cultural and 
political context of the US, France, and former Soviet Union. What did it mean 
to "know" the computer and in what futures would this knowledge have currency?  
This look at the moment in history when the computer "went public" is an 
invitation to reflect upon the nature of our own knowledge of the computer and 
the ontological and normative constitutions of the human in today's 
computerized world.

Biography:  Margo Boenig-Liptsin is a PhD candidate in History of Science and 
Science and Technology Studies (STS) at Harvard and in Philosophy at the 
Sorbonne in Paris. Born in Kiev, Ukraine two weeks before the Chernobyl 
disaster and growing up at the heart of the Silicon Valley in the 1990s, she 
has always wondered about the profound role of science and technology--and the 
imaginations thereof--in the formation of contemporary human identities, 
sensibilities and social orders. Margo's dissertation is devoted to the study 
of this question by investigating comparatively the visions of the computer 
literate citizen of the information age.  Her other projects explore 
contemporary sociotechnical imaginaries of technology entrepreneurs and how 
these draw upon and resonate in wider cultures, in the US as well as in Western 
and Eastern Europe. After graduation Margo would like to use her free time to 
study comparatively perspectives of the human subject in Eastern Orthodox and 
Western philosophical and literary traditions and hopes to work on STS projects 
in a lab-like collaborative environment with innovative outputs and 
contemporary relevance.




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