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Recoding Gender - Women's Changing Participation in Computing (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,255
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Recoding Gender - Women's Changing Participation in Computing (Paperback)
Series: History of Computing
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The untold history of women and computing: how pioneering women
succeeded in a field shaped by gender biases. Today, women earn a
relatively low percentage of computer science degrees and hold
proportionately few technical computing jobs. Meanwhile, the
stereotype of the male "computer geek" seems to be everywhere in
popular culture. Few people know that women were a significant
presence in the early decades of computing in both the United
States and Britain. Indeed, programming in postwar years was
considered woman's work (perhaps in contrast to the more manly task
of building the computers themselves). In Recoding Gender, Janet
Abbate explores the untold history of women in computer science and
programming from the Second World War to the late twentieth
century. Demonstrating how gender has shaped the culture of
computing, she offers a valuable historical perspective on today's
concerns over women's underrepresentation in the field. Abbate
describes the experiences of women who worked with the earliest
electronic digital computers: Colossus, the wartime codebreaking
computer at Bletchley Park outside London, and the American ENIAC,
developed to calculate ballistics. She examines postwar methods for
recruiting programmers, and the 1960s redefinition of programming
as the more masculine "software engineering." She describes the
social and business innovations of two early software
entrepreneurs, Elsie Shutt and Stephanie Shirley; and she examines
the career paths of women in academic computer science. Abbate's
account of the bold and creative strategies of women who loved
computing work, excelled at it, and forged successful careers will
provide inspiration for those working to change gendered computing
culture.
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