Internet Historiography
Dear AOIRers, Anybody know of articles or books analysing 1) the political historiography of the internet. Who has criticized the historiography of the internet as being written for political gain? Secondly, any research on 2) the space shared by classic liberalism, technology, and history? I am writing this piece on how Obama’s statement on “the internet… you didn’t build that,” celebrating social liberal federal investments in technology, has been (mis)interpreted by various political actors. Any leads? Best, Adam Fish, PhD Media and Cultural Studies Department of Sociology Lancaster University, UK LA1 4YT p. 01524592699 a.fish2@lancaster.ac.uk @mediacultures, mediacultures.org http://www.research.lancs.ac.uk/portal/en/people/adam-fish(10a5067e-a828-497...
Dear Adam, Niels Brugger's work might be helpful to you, including his book Web History: < http://www.amazon.com/History-Digital-Formations-Niels-4gger/dp/1433104687>. Best wishes, Peter On Thu, May 16, 2013 at 11:29 AM, Adam Fish <rawbird@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear AOIRers,
Anybody know of articles or books analysing 1) the political historiography of the internet. Who has criticized the historiography of the internet as being written for political gain?
Secondly, any research on 2) the space shared by classic liberalism, technology, and history?
I am writing this piece on how Obama’s statement on “the internet… you didn’t build that,” celebrating social liberal federal investments in technology, has been (mis)interpreted by various political actors.
Any leads?
Best,
Adam Fish, PhD
Media and Cultural Studies
Department of Sociology
Lancaster University, UK
LA1 4YT
p. 01524592699
a.fish2@lancaster.ac.uk
@mediacultures, mediacultures.org
http://www.research.lancs.ac.uk/portal/en/people/adam-fish(10a5067e-a828-497... _______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- Peter Joseph Gloviczki, Ph.D. http://petergloviczki.com
Hi Adam - For your first question, I presented a paper last fall called "Histories of Networking vs. the History of the Internet" that took political misinterpretations of the Internet's history (by Steven Johnson and Gordon Crovitz) as a point of departure. You can find it at http://arussell.org/papers/russell-SIGCIS-2012.pdf. In late 2013 Cambridge University Press will publish my book, _An Open World: History, Ideology, and Network Standards_ which has some critical comments on the historiography of the Internet, although perhaps not quite in the way you have framed it. On the second question, it's tough to know where to start since your question is one of the major questions that scholars in STS, the history of technology, and business history have been pursuing for decades (assuming you mean New Deal-style liberalism, as we call it in the US): Sheila Jasanoff, Langdon Winner, Richard John, Steve Usselman, Lou Galambos, Brian Balogh, Michael Dennis, Dominique Tobbell, etc. If you mean American federal policies that have promoted technological innovation, Norberg & O'Neill's "Transforming Computer Technology" has a richly detailed history of ARPA's IPTO - which sounds directly on point for you. I'm happy to be more specific or otherwise share cites, etc if you think it would be helpful; and in any case please let us know when you finish what you're working on! Cheers, Andy On May 16, 2013, at 12:29 PM, Adam Fish <rawbird@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear AOIRers,
Anybody know of articles or books analysing 1) the political historiography of the internet. Who has criticized the historiography of the internet as being written for political gain?
Secondly, any research on 2) the space shared by classic liberalism, technology, and history?
I am writing this piece on how Obama’s statement on “the internet… you didn’t build that,” celebrating social liberal federal investments in technology, has been (mis)interpreted by various political actors.
Any leads?
Best,
Adam Fish, PhD
Media and Cultural Studies
Department of Sociology
Lancaster University, UK
LA1 4YT
p. 01524592699
a.fish2@lancaster.ac.uk
@mediacultures, mediacultures.org
http://www.research.lancs.ac.uk/portal/en/people/adam-fish(10a5067e-a828-497...
--------------------------------------------------------------------- Andrew L. Russell, Ph.D. Director, Program in Science & Technology Studies Assistant Professor, History College of Arts & Letters Stevens Institute of Technology Hoboken, New Jersey 07030 t. 201-216-5400 f. 201-216-8245 arussell@stevens.edu http://www.stevens.edu/cal/sts http://www.arussell.org
participants (3)
-
Adam Fish -
Andrew Russell -
Peter Gloviczki