The University of Michigan
School of Information and Department of Women's Studies
WS483/006 & SI513: Women + Technology
Winter 2001

 

Prof.: R. Frost, 417D West Hall; 647-6536 (ofc) 332-0031 (home);

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Time/Place: Wednesdays, 2:00 - 5:00, 409 West Hall
Office Hours: Tuesdays 9-11, Wednesdays, 11-1.

course objectives:

Technology is neither good nor bad, but it is critically important to investigate how technical power and knowledge operate in contemporary society. Context is everything, so in this course we will examine the difficult relationship between women and technology.

Why a difficult relationship? Perhaps because technical know-how as a form of knowledge is so strongly male-identified, perhaps because in this era the acquisition of (or claim to) expertise provides access to power and accentuates the exclusion of women from power, perhaps because historically women were to be "served" by technological gadgets, perhaps because the recent emergence of formidable information technologies has sharply divided women between enthusiasts and loathers--whatever the reason, we had better investigate it.

In this course, we will examine centrally issues of technology, gender, power, and politics. In one sense we will examine how society shapes technologies and how technologies, once implanted, shape societies--that's fine, but we will more concisely examine how technological artifacts have been used to engender women in very specific ways, and how women have tried to reshape technologies for their own uses. For example, as part of an examination of technoenthusiastic rhetoric, we'll see how liberatory discourses were developed in order to "free" women from the demands of hard, paid labor and, in turn, to liberate them from "domestic servitude." From this, we will learn that, as Marcuse argued, some liberatory impulses can often oppress further.

If knowledge is power, this course will empower--in part by examining paths of disempowerment, in part by understanding the social dynamics of technology.

 course readings:

(available exclusively at Shaman Drum, 315 South State Street)

--plus a course pack (available at Dollar Bill, 611 Church St, 1/2 block south of S. University Ave.

--plus electronic readings available on the course WWW page:
http://www-personal.si.umich.edu/~rfrost/courses/currcrse.html;
this includes a pdf and an html version of this syllabus as well, and both will be updated through the term.


assignments:

 Students will be expected to complete a research paper--thesis chapters are acceptable--of about 20 pages on topics of their choice. Topics should first be cleared with the professor, and we will spend some class time discussing research approaches and proposals, which themselves will be required. Students will also be expected to select a relevant book or article and write a 5 to 7-page critique of it and integrate their reactions to it into the research paper. Some time will be spent in class on developing research (and researchable) topics. Weighting of scores: research proposals, 20%; research paper, 40%; recommended book critiques, 25%; class participation: 15%.

 schedule of meetings & topics:

 Week 1 (January 3). [No meeting due to UM calendar]

 Week 2 (January 10). Introduction to Technology: What Constructs What?

Week 3 (January 17). Feminist Epistemology and Technology

 

Week 4 (January 24). Theories and History of Women + Technology

 

Week 5 (January 31). Masculinity and excluding women from science and technology

>>Be Prepared to Discuss Research Proposals due for Week 6<<

 Here are the links we talked about on Wednesday:

The how to argue piece

The biography of Captain Crunch, the famous hacker

The model research proposal

The powerpoint slides for the presentation on Doing Research (I tried to convert them to html, but M$'s html tools stink to html)

Week 6 (February 7).Technical Change & the Gender Division of Paid Labor (I)

 

Week 7 (Feb. 14). Technical Change & the Gender Division of Paid Labor (II)

 

Week 8 (February 21). The Industrial Revolution in the Home

 

Week 9 (March 7). Men as Producers; Women as Consumers.

 

>> Note Well: Book critiques due for Week 10! <<

 

Week 10 (March 14). Women in the Technology Professions I

 

Week 11 (March 21). Women in the Technology Professions II

 

>> Note Well: Research papers due for Week 12! <<

 

Week 12 (March 28). Medtech, Cosmetics, and the Feminine Body

 

Week 13 (April 4). Cyberculture and Feminist Visions of Dis-/U-topias

 

Week 14 (April 11). Final Catch-up and Recapitulation.

 

Here are the supplemental readings, including but not limited to: